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Portrait of Daruma

Ikkyū15th century

Kimbell Art Museum

Kimbell Art Museum
Fort Worth, United States

Daruma, known also by the Sanskrit name Bodhidharma, is the legendary first patriarch of Zen Buddhism. He is said to have been a south Indian prince who introduced the meditative sect of Buddhism to China in the sixth century. Among numerous exploits attributed to Daruma, his unbroken nine-year meditation in a mountain cave is the most famous. This immobile profile of Daruma, created by a few swift strokes, suggests this feat and conveys the sense of unyielding discipline admired by the disciples of Zen. The colophon has the signature of Ikkyu Sojun, a prominent monk renowned for his idiosyncratic interpretation of Zen ideals and also famed as a calligrapher. An old inscription on the box attributes the image to Soga Dasoku, who was a disciple of Ikkyu.

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  • Title: Portrait of Daruma
  • Creator: Attributed to Soga Dasoku (calligraphy attr. to Ikkyu Sojun)
  • Date Created: 15th century
  • Physical Dimensions: 36 9/16 x 13 9/16 in. (92.8 x 34.5 cm)
  • Provenance: Viscount Matsudaira; Baron Kuki; Mr. Kinta Muto Hyogo; (N. V. Hammer, Inc., New York) by 1969; purchased by Kimbell Art Foundation, Fort Worth, 1970.
  • Rights: Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas
  • External Link: www.kimbellart.org
  • Medium: Hanging scroll; ink on paper
  • Kamakura period (1185-1333): Muromachi period (1392–1573)
  • Japanese: Japanese
  • Artist Dates: (Dasoku active c. 1452–1483; Sojun, 1394–1481)
Kimbell Art Museum

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