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Kshitigarbha as Lord of the Six Ways, ink and colours on silk

963/963

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

The bodhisattva Kshitigarbha is shown wearing a hood and seated on a lotus behind an altar accompanied by two worshipping bodhisattvas. On the three lines on each side of his halo are depicted 'The Six Ways of Life': gods, animals and hell (top left) and humans, ashuras (mythical four-armed figures) and hungry ghosts (right).In the lower section of the painting are donor figures, wearing fashionable clothes, the women with typical tenth-century hair styles decorated with hairpins and flowers. According to the inscription, the donor wished to avoid all bad forms of rebirth: 'The maker of this painting was the disciple of pure faith, Kang Qingnu. His body lodges in the House of Fire and he fears to fall in the Five Evil Ways. Fortune and disaster are inconstant; his heart longs to be among the emancipated...'. Kshitigarbha is depicted and invoked here as he had vowed to rescue souls even from the regions of hell, and this offers hope to the donor and his family.

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  • Title: Kshitigarbha as Lord of the Six Ways, ink and colours on silk
  • Date Created: 963/963
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 56.10cm; Width: 51.50cm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: painted
  • Subject: bodhisattva; lotus
  • Registration number: 1919,0101,0.19
  • Place: Excavated/Findspot Qian Fo Dong. Excavated/Findspot
  • Period/culture: Southern Song dynasty
  • Material: silk
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Collected by Stein, Marc Aurel
British Museum

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