View Full Version : The Art Circle Library Thread.
RichardH
04-08-2016, 01:55 AM
The Treeleaf Art Circle Library is a Zen Buddhist Arts and Culture resource for our community.
Members are invited to post the following….
Visual (photos and video), audio, digital, and interactive links, documenting art, craft, story, and music, directly related to the cultural transmission and practice of the Buddha Dharma. This can include both historical and contemporary work, including your own creations that have been publicly displayed*.
Each posting should begin with the tags #traditional, or #contemporary, or #treeleaf artist. The title should be clear and descriptive. The names of craftspeople involved and the time-frame of activity should also be included. Many great works of Buddhist Art have been created by anonymous craftspeople within a loose time frame. When this is the case you can reference the historical period of production. Any background information you can provide, including links, will be helpful.
Please direct any questions to me by PM, and thank you very much for participating.
Gassho
Daizan
Sat today
* Please do not be shy about including your own work on a thread containing historical work. If you have created Buddhist inspired art, grounded in your practice, and publicly displayed, you are doing what people have done for thousands of years.
RichardH
04-08-2016, 02:02 AM
#traditional
Realm of the Hungry Ghost.
3444
An Image from a Japanese scroll which describes the realm of the hungry ghosts and how to placate them. Currently housed at the Kyoto National Museum, artist unknown.
Gassho
Daizan
sat today
Shokai
04-09-2016, 01:40 AM
Dogen's Fukanzazengi
3446
Zen Literature Website (http://terebess.hu/zen/dogen/Fukanzazengi.html)
Wikipedia Excerpt (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukan_zazengi)
Dogen zenji's Fukanzazengi, a text written when he was 26 years old, after he had just returned from studying at Ch'an temples in China. This text contains pointers for the practice of Zazen in the monastery Dogen established with Imperial support. But it also contains the essence of Dogen's theory of what "enlightenment" is and how it relates to everyday activity, such as taking up the sitting posture in the Dharma Hall.
gassho, Shokai
Jundo
04-09-2016, 11:57 AM
#contemporary
I like these two artists from Japan ... the first is a bit of an acquired taste perhaps ...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takashi_Murakami
Takashi Murakami’s first solo exhibition in Japan in 14 years, set to open to the public at the Mori Art Museum at the end of October.
The centerpiece of this exhibition is “The 500 Arhats,” a hundred-meter-long painting inspired by a series of dialogues that Murakami conducted with art historian Tsuji Nobuo that is being shown in Japan for the first time. Consisting of four separate sections, each named for one of the Chinese guardians of the four celestial directions (blue dragon – east, white tiger – west, red bird – south, black tortoise – north).
Murakami’s epic painting was created in part as a gesture of thanks to Qatar, one of the first nations to offer Japan assistance in the wake of the earthquake and tsunami of March 2011. It was unveiled to great acclaim at the “Murakami – Ego” exhibition, held at the Al-Riwaq Exhibition Hall in Doha in 2012.
Originally, the 500 arhats were believed to be the enlightened disciples of Buddha who worked to spread his teachings. Their faith was transmitted to Japan during the Heian period and continued to penetrate the farthest reaches of the country in the form of relic-like paintings and sculptures.
“The 500 Arhats” also owes a deep artistic debt to Murakami’s historical predecessors from the Edo period, some of whose works will also be displayed as a counterpoint at this exhibition. Nagasawa Rosetsu’s rendition of the same topic, painstakingly and minutely depicted on a microscopic 3-centimeter-square area, seems to capture the cosmos in miniature. Kano Kazunobu’s sprawling “Five Hundred Arhats” series, on the other hand, consists of 100 painted scrolls created over a ten-year period that portrays the arduous training undergone by the arhats.
http://www.asahicom.jp/special/murakami500/images/2.jpg
http://static.highsnobiety.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/05225916/Takashi-Murakami-500-Arhats-Mori-000.jpg
http://www.artpremium.com/platform/img11/murakami-500.jpg
I also like this mid-20th Century woodblock artist ... Shikō Munakata (棟方 志功 Munakata Shikō?, September 5, 1903 – September 13, 1975) ... also Arhats ...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shik%C5%8D_Munakata
http://www.oberlin.edu/images/Art251/147ppt.JPG
More here:
https://www.google.co.jp/search?q=Munakata+Shiko+buddhist&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi6irHrz4DMAhWBn5QKHWJaDmcQ_AUIBygB&biw=1745&bih=868
Gassho, J
PS - Even in traditional Asian images, the 500 Arhats are often shown with their own very unique, human and often funny personalities. Here is an example ...
http://www.gokunming.com/en/blog/image/small/9539.jpg
#traditional
Ensō
In Zen Buddhism, an ensō (円相 , "circle"?) is a circle that is hand-drawn in one or two uninhibited brushstrokes to express a moment when the mind is free to let the body create.
More can be read here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ens%C5%8D
3447
Gassho
Shingen
s@today
Byrne
04-09-2016, 07:39 PM
A Bhavacakra I made last year #treeleafartist #contemporarybuddhistart
3450
My favorite Buddha I've ever come across. This one is from China circa 1300's depicting Shakyamuni as an acetic. This one is one display at the Birmingham Museum of Art in Alabama which has an amazing Asian art section. Really unique stuff there. #traditionalbuddhistart
3451
Gassho
Sat Today
Tai Shi
04-10-2016, 11:03 AM
#treeleaf artist
Meditations on Gratitude and Winter from Spring by Charles Taylor.
Special collections, Grinnell College Library.
Meditation on Space
Night sky shows clear,
Sixty miles gale forced wind
Vacuous points toward
Space above air, insight
Ash, maple, river birch,
Gone, cut from hot sand, earth,
This drought as dry February,
Clouds capture dusk, then night,
Filled with dark matter,
No oxygen, I turn to stars,
Escape gravity, earth below
Stratosphere ionic layer
Dissolves last of atmosphere,
More than seventeen thousand
Miles an hour into orbit,
Floats into vision, gone again,
Into light hours past
Jupiter, past my solar vision,
Thousands of unexpected forms,
Sun propelled at speeds
I cannot comprehend,
Atoms once in cubic space
Empty, insidious, natural
Black space rests again.
Tai Shi
Charles E Taylor
Gassho
RichardH
04-10-2016, 12:55 PM
#traditional
"The Paradise of Maitreya"
A "dry fresco" by Zhu Haogu and Zhang Boyuan created in 1298. Located in the Bishop White Gallery of Chinese Temple Art , Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto.
3458
Gassho
Daizan
sat today
Jinyo
04-10-2016, 05:32 PM
# treeleaf artist
Hi there - probably best if I just enter my website link - the most specific piece influenced by Buddhism is an installation I exhibited with a fellow artist - entitled
Skypath.
www.paulaburns.co.uk
The second novel (on the novels page) entitled 'Conversations with Leopard' definitely mirrors Zen philosophy regarding the challenges of life - the final chapters
deal specifically with my 'journey' thus far - beginning with a chance encounter with the teachings of Thich Nhat Hahn. There are also some reflections on my journey towards becoming an artist.
The earlier novel 'Blue Grey Island' also takes art as a theme and is quite Zen in its import (though the central character goes through a journey of losing and regaining his Catholic faith).
Just now - I'm thinking deeply on the convention of the Book of Hours - and wondering about working on a Buddhist equivalent. Does anyone have any ideas ?:reading:
I'd like to include art/poetry and music.
Gassho
Willow/Jinyo
sat today
Cooperix
04-10-2016, 09:20 PM
#treeleaf artist
http://annecooperstudio.com/rakusu%20project.html
FEEL OF THE NEEDLE: THE RAKUSU PROJECT
I began working on this project several years ago and have had 2 performance/ installations (one in Albuquerque and one in Austin) with plans for more. I am a contemporary artist working in multi-media. This was my first choreographed performance. And it was a wonderful experience putting it together. And working with my amazing cast.
There is a link on the URL posted (page from my website) to see the 20 minute performance done in my studio a year and a half ago. IN all I have sewn 60 of the paper garments and have plans to continue sewing. Although I only use 21 in the performance/installations.
I learned to sew the paper facsimile rakusu from Taigu and learned about Santoka Taneda from Taigu as well. Bowing to Taigu and Treeleaf!!! such inspiration...
deep bow.
Anne
~st~
Shokai
04-11-2016, 01:45 AM
The Birth of Buddha
Buddhist Treasures (http://www.frontline.in/arts-and-culture/heritage/buddhist-treasures/article4569610.ece)
3459
The birth of the Buddha, Mural by Soliyas Mendis, Kelaniya Vihara, early 20th century. Soliyas Mendis' paintings are remarkable in showing their roots in the art of Sri Lanka and ancient India while serving the contemporaneous needs of Buddhists on the Island.
gassho,
Shokai
04-11-2016, 01:57 AM
The Buddhist art of the Mogao Caves
Secrets of the Silk Road (http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/0/24624407)
3460
In a secret cave on China's ancient Silk Road, one of the world's most incredible collections of art lay locked away in darkness for 900 years.
gassho,
Cooperix
04-11-2016, 04:15 PM
#contemporary
Here in New Mexico we must have an artist for every 5 people. A visually rich state, both with talent and beauty.
I will post several fellow artist's work over the next couple of days. Once I get the OK from them.
Today's post is the website of Susan Myo on Linnell. Sue's work is highly reflective of her dharma influence. She is currently in Okayama at Sogenji studying with Shodo Harada Roshi.
Her art career and Buddhist history is clearly stated on her "history" page, and you will find interesting work (ENSO paintings/ oxherding paintings) on the "artifacts" page. Sue is a wonderful painter and with her immersion in Zen the focus has turned more to the minimal and spare. When I first met her she was considered an abstract expressionist (early 80s).
IN my opinion she's one of the top painters in New Mexico.
http://www.susanmyoonlinnell.org/
Enjoy!
bows...
Anne
~st~
Sozan
04-11-2016, 09:54 PM
#contemporary #traditional
Tenshin-en contemplative garden at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. Watch the two videos at bottom of the page for a better look.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/featured-galleries/japanese-garden-tenshin-en
Gassho
Sozan
s@2day
Cooperix
04-12-2016, 05:05 PM
#contemporary
_/\_
Patrick Nagatani is an emeritus professor retired from the University of New Mexico. He was in the photography department although its hard to classify him as only a photographer.
The Buddhist inspired work is shown on his website under BODIES OF WORK - tape-estries. Be sure to read the "statement" under the tape-estries heading. He describes his process in making these works and his inspiration. Essentially and with amazing results he "paints" with masking tape. You will need to scroll down to the "Buddhist Tape-estries" to see the dharma inspired work. Fortunate for me we own "Introspection".
He is an amazing artist. much admired both regionally and nationally.
http://www.patricknagatani.com/
respectfully submitted,
Anne
~st~
Ryumon
04-13-2016, 12:31 AM
#traditional
Enso, painted by Kaz Tanahashi
3462
I bought an enso from Kaz Tanahashi a bit more than a year ago. It hangs on the wall of my home office, the room where I sit.
Gassho,
Kirk
SatToday
Cooperix
04-13-2016, 03:57 PM
#contemporary
These two photographers both have a strong Zen practice, one trained in Soto the other Renzai.
Margot Geist ... http://www.geistlight.com/#/FINE%20ART%20WORK/DHARMA%20SNAPS/1/thumbs
James Burbank (sits with 2 other men in the area calling themselves "THE THREE STONES", which I find an endearing name, is a photographer and a writer. Unfortunately the amazing spare poems that accompany these photos are not on his website, He published a book of them and the images last year titled THE OXBOW POEMS Slow Walks on the Rio Grande. He lists them on facebook, but I don't have an account so I don't want to post anything I've not seen.
please go to BEYOND THE RIO on his home page and make sure the sound is on to hear the chants accompanying the images. nice.
http://jimbu0.wix.com/mysite
That's it for now. Sorry to have inundated you with so much local art work inspired by the dharma, but I find it most relevant and beautiful. And hope you find it an interesting contemporary interpretation of one's practice.
bows,
Anne
~st~
FaithMoon
04-14-2016, 04:18 AM
I'm not an artist but did make this Jizo from white cement and rebar in memory of my mother. It was installed in the garden at Zen Center of L.A. about 16 years ago.
34653466
Cooperix
04-14-2016, 10:29 AM
FaithMoon...
Indeed you are an artist.
A beautiful Jizo.
Cooperix
05-02-2016, 07:01 PM
#contemporary
Just remembered another wonderful contemporary artist working with Buddhist theme...
Montien Boonma
I have a book of his work Temple of the Mind. He did very beautiful work, deeply inspired. He died young and not too long ago, sadly.
http://nymag.com/nymetro/arts/art/reviews/n_8660/
bowing again
Anne
~st~
Sekishi
05-03-2016, 09:04 PM
#treeleaf artist
I definitely do not consider myself an artist, but I do doodle from time to time. Here is a digital "painting" made on an ipad a few years ago.
3557
Gassho,
Sekishi
#sattoday
Jishin
05-03-2016, 09:36 PM
Very cool Sekishi.
Gasho, Jishin, _/st\_
#treeleaf artist
I definitely do not consider myself an artist, but I do doodle from time to time. Here is a digital "painting" made on an ipad a few years ago.
3557
Gassho,
Sekishi
#sattoday
Nicely done Sekishi by a "not consider myself and artist"! =)
Gassho
Shingen
s@today
#treeleaf artist
I definitely do not consider myself an artist, but I do doodle from time to time. Here is a digital "painting" made on an ipad a few years ago.
3557
Gassho,
Sekishi
#sattoday
Nice
Jakuden
05-05-2016, 01:16 AM
#treeleaf artist
I definitely do not consider myself an artist, but I do doodle from time to time. Here is a digital "painting" made on an ipad a few years ago.
3557
Gassho,
Sekishi
#sattoday
Wow! That's amazing!
Gassho,
Jakuden
SatToday
Sekishi
05-07-2016, 05:40 PM
#contemporary #photo journalism
3560
"A monk prays for a dead man in the station hall of the Shanxi Taiyuan Train Station in Shanxi, China, November 25, 2011. A monk who was waiting for the train performed a religious ceremony for the man, who was found dead, Xinhua News Agency reported. REUTERS/Asianewsphoto"
http://www.reuters.com/news/picture/photos-of-the-week?articleId=USRTR2V1YD
It was also voted (on the Phoenix TV network in China) as one of the most important Buddhist event of the year: http://fo.ifeng.com/special/2011zhongguofojiao/
---
One could argue about the nature of journalism vs. art of course. But I post this photo because I believe it both illustrates in simple tones what fearlessness and compassion can look like, and because it is part of how I ended up joining Treeleaf.
This photo really struck a good friend of mine, and was a Dharma gate of sorts for him - putting his feet on the road to Buddhist practice. He keeps a print of it hanging on his wall as a reminder. Anyhow, at some point a few years ago, he stumbled across Treeleaf and told me about it, and I joined! Causes and conditions! ^_^
Gassho,
Sekishi
RichardH
05-07-2016, 11:43 PM
#contemporary #photo journalism
3560
"A monk prays for a dead man in the station hall of the Shanxi Taiyuan Train Station in Shanxi, China, November 25, 2011. A monk who was waiting for the train performed a religious ceremony for the man, who was found dead, Xinhua News Agency reported. REUTERS/Asianewsphoto"
http://www.reuters.com/news/picture/photos-of-the-week?articleId=USRTR2V1YD
It was also voted (on the Phoenix TV network in China) as one of the most important Buddhist event of the year: http://fo.ifeng.com/special/2011zhongguofojiao/
---
One could argue about the nature of journalism vs. art of course. But I post this photo because I believe it both illustrates in simple tones what fearlessness and compassion can look like, and because it is part of how I ended up joining Treeleaf.
This photo really struck a good friend of mine, and was a Dharma gate of sorts for him - putting his feet on the road to Buddhist practice. He keeps a print of it hanging on his wall as a reminder. Anyhow, at some point a few years ago, he stumbled across Treeleaf and told me about it, and I joined! Causes and conditions! ^_^
Gassho,
Sekishi
When you mentioned this photo in a conversation a week or so ago, I thought I had seen it, but this is the first time. It is really powerful and I'm not sure why. The dead man, the yellowish light, the crowd curious but staying away. I remember when my father-in-law died in the night, and having to dress him and put in his teeth before the family came over. He had gone from a man we could hug to a cold pale thing you don't want to be in the same room with. How much more so for a stranger, on a hard seat, in the sour light of a busy station? The monk is showing the man respect and preserving his dignity.
Deep bows
Daizan
Sat today
#contemporary #photo journalism
3560
"A monk prays for a dead man in the station hall of the Shanxi Taiyuan Train Station in Shanxi, China, November 25, 2011. A monk who was waiting for the train performed a religious ceremony for the man, who was found dead, Xinhua News Agency reported. REUTERS/Asianewsphoto"
http://www.reuters.com/news/picture/photos-of-the-week?articleId=USRTR2V1YD
It was also voted (on the Phoenix TV network in China) as one of the most important Buddhist event of the year: http://fo.ifeng.com/special/2011zhongguofojiao/
---
One could argue about the nature of journalism vs. art of course. But I post this photo because I believe it both illustrates in simple tones what fearlessness and compassion can look like, and because it is part of how I ended up joining Treeleaf.
This photo really struck a good friend of mine, and was a Dharma gate of sorts for him - putting his feet on the road to Buddhist practice. He keeps a print of it hanging on his wall as a reminder. Anyhow, at some point a few years ago, he stumbled across Treeleaf and told me about it, and I joined! Causes and conditions! ^_^
Gassho,
Sekishi
Truly a powerful image of compassion ... thank you for sharing this Sekishi.
Gassho
Shingen
s@today
Nindo
05-31-2016, 10:20 PM
#contemporary
Dave Tinman Edgar, artist, veteran, Zen practitioner
http://tinmanstudio.org/
Gassho
Nindo
sattoday
Nindo
05-31-2016, 10:25 PM
#historic
From an old thread:
A couple days ago, I visited the Art Institute of Chicago. They have a great collection of Japanese, Indian, Southeast Asian, and Himalayan Art. Needless to say, lots of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, as well as Hindu deities. I put up a flickr set of photos, if anyone would like to take a look (I did the best I could without being allowed to use a flash :wink: ).
https://www.flickr.com/photos/26380553@N05/sets/72157626294771402/
Nindo
06-01-2016, 03:08 PM
#historic
another old thread linking to Asian art collection in Washington DC
http://www.treeleaf.org/forums/showthread.php?9786-Travel-Recommendation-Buddhist-Art-in-Washington-DC
Gassho
Nindo
sattoday
Statute of Kannon at my local art museum. He/she is about 8 ft tall and carved completely from wood. It amazes me every time I see ithttp://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20160602/51229ff3f00c51109fa7b6d2187a171a.jpg
It was made during the Liao Dynasty (907-1125) in China.
..sat2day•合掌
Sekishi
07-03-2016, 09:51 PM
#Contemporary
"Seated Woman" -- bronze sculpture by Francisco Zuniga (1975).
3604
I do not believe there to be any "Buddhist influence" to this piece (Zuniga's works often depict the indigenous women of south-eastern Mexico), but it just really spoke to me when I visited it this week. The inherent dignity of her seated pose is inspiring and not unlike that of a Buddha (to these eyes anyway).
Gassho,
Sekishi
#sattoday
Nindo
08-04-2016, 07:39 PM
#historic
A visit to the Glenbow Museum in Calgary, June 2016.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/wgrien/albums/72157671606952496
Gassho
Nindo
Nindo
08-04-2016, 07:40 PM
#historic
Two visits to the Musee Guimet in Paris, 2005 and 2016.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/wgrien/albums/72157671734689955
Gassho
Nindo
Wonderful photos Nindo, thank you! =)
Gassho
Shingen
s@today
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