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Mogao Cave 17: Manjusri with Thousand Bowls
Mogao Cave 17: Manjusri with Thousand Bowls
 

Mogao Cave 17: Manjusri with Thousand Bowls

CHINA, Gansu, Dunhuang; Tang dynasty (618–907); Ink and color on silk; 171 x 143 cm; State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia
This artwork from the Mid-Tang period (756-846) is illustrated according to the descriptions of Manjusri Bodhisattva found in the Sutra on Manjusri with Thousand Arms and Thousand Bowls and the Manjusri Yoga Method from the Vajrasekhara Sutra. The Bodhisattva sits in full lotus position on a lotus throne. The smooth, round face is surrounded by a nimbus decorated with undulating colored lines. Manjusri has yellow skin, wears a crown and a necklace, and has chrysanthemums behind the ears. The numerous arms, arranged in a large circle, form mudras or hold bowls.
  Manjusri is accompanied by other Bodhisattvas, Heavenly Kings including Vaisravana, Heavenly King of the North, and heavenly beings such as Mahesvara. Though illustrations of Manjusri with a thousand arms and a thousand bowls are rare, another similar work was also found in Mogao Cave 361.
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