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The Buddhist deities Avalokiteshvara and Vasundhara
The Buddhist deities Avalokiteshvara and Vasundhara

The Buddhist deities Avalokiteshvara and Vasundhara

Place of OriginJava, Indonesia
Dateapprox. 850-950
MaterialsSilver and bronze
DimensionsH. 4 3/4 in x W. 5 1/2 in x D. 2 in, H. 12.1 cm x W. 14 cm x D. 5.1 cm
Credit LineGift of the Walter and Phyllis Shorenstein Fund
Object numberB86B1
ClassificationsSculpture
On View
On view
LocationGallery 9
More Information

Buddhist Bronzes  from Indonesia

“Many kings in the islands of the Southern Ocean admire and believe Buddhism. In the city I visited, Buddhist priests number more than 1,000, whose minds are bent on learning and good practices.”*

So reported a Chinese Buddhist monk when he stopped at the Indonesian island of Sumatra in the 680s on his way home from visiting India’s holy sites.

For the next five hundred years Buddhism, in its Mahayana and Vajrayana traditions, flourished in parts of Indonesia, particularly the island of Java. In fact, Java produced, particularly in the 800s, some of the most complex, ambitious, and beautiful Buddhist monuments of all time. Despite the fact that the majority of the Indonesian population is Muslim today, Borobudur remains a popular tourist destination and a marker of cultural pride.

*Adapted from J. Takakusu’s 1896 translation of A Record of the Buddhist Religion as Practised in India and the Malay Archipelago by the monk Yijing.

The bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara can be recognized by the tiny seated Buddha at the front of his hairdress. The female deity next to him is holding in her left hand a stalk of grain, and, if this is rice, it may identify her as Vasundhara.

Subject
  • Buddhism
  • deity
  • Avalokiteshvara