Tibetan Visual Models on the Silk Road

Amy Heller

Buddha, two bodhisattvas, and attendants hover above terraced landscape and crowds of people; painted in oranges, reds, and yellows

Paradise of Bhaishajyaguru; Dunhuang, China; 836; ink and color on silk; 60 × 70 in. (152.3 × 177.8 cm); The British Museum, London; 1919,0101,0.32; photograph © The Trustees of the British Museum. All rights reserved

Bhaishajyaguru, the Buddha of Healing

Dunhuang, Gansu Province, China 836

Paradise of Bhaishajyaguru; Dunhuang, China; 836; ink and color on silk; 60 × 70 in. (152.3 × 177.8 cm); The British Museum, London; 1919,0101,0.32; photograph © The Trustees of the British Museum. All rights reserved

Summary

In 1900, at a desert site on the former “Silk-Road” in Western China, a Daoist monk discovered a hidden room in a cave-shrine filled with thousands of images and texts in various languages. This inscribed painting was commissioned by a monk-translator in an age when the Tibetan Empire dominated the trade routes of Central Asia. Tibetologist and art historian Amy Heller explains how the multicultural nature of this desert oasis on trade routes informed Chinese, Tibetan, and Indian Buddhist images in this scroll.

Key Terms

bodhisattva

In Buddhism, a bodhisattva is a being who has made a vow to become a buddha or awakened. In the Mahayana and Vajrayana traditions, many bodhisattvas are understood as deities with enormous powers who delay their final enlightenment, remaining in the phenomenal world to help suffering beings. Among such great bodhisattvas are Avalokiteshvara, Manjushri, Vajrapani, and Maitreya.

Buddha

In Buddhism and Bon, a buddha is understood as a being who practices good deeds for many lifetimes, and finally, through intense meditation, achieves nirvana, or ”awakening”—a state beyond suffering, free from the cycle of birth and death. “The Buddha” of our age is Shakyamuni, or Siddhartha Gautama. He is considered the founding teacher of the religion we call Buddhism. The buddha prior to Shakyamuni was called Dipamkara, and the next buddha will be Maitreya. These are known as Buddhas of the Three Times. Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhists believe that there are infinite buddhas in infinite universes, who have many bodies or emanations. Other important buddhas include Amitabha, Vairochana, Bhaishajyaguru, Maitreya, and many more.

iconography

In the Himalayan context, iconography refers to the forms found in religious images, especially the attributes of deities: body color, number of arms and legs, hand gestures, poses, implements, and retinue. Often these attributes are specified in ritual texts (sadhanas), which artists are expected to follow faithfully.

merit

In Buddhism, merit is accumulated positive karma, or positive actions, that lead to positive results, such as better rebirths. Buddhists gain merit by reciting mantras, donating to monasteries and those in need, performing pilgrimages, commissioning artworks, reproducing and reciting Buddhist texts, and other deeds with good intentions. It is believed that merit can also be transferred to others through rituals performed to gain merit for deceased family members help them achieve a better rebirth. Merit making is an important motivation for positive ritual action, and is a prerequisite for success of religious and even secular activity.

Silk Roads

“Silk Roads” is a term broadly used to describe the long-distance trade routes across Central Asia that connected the Indian Subcontinent with East Asia and the Mediterranean world. These trade routes were highly important in transmitting both art and ideas across the Asian continent, including the Buddhist religion. There were many “silk roads”—some crossed the deserts of Central Asia, other maritime routes also connected Europe, the Middle East, Africa, South, Southeast, and East Asia.

Tibetan script

The Tibetan script is used to write the Tibetan language, as well as several other smaller Himalayan languages. Based on the Brahmi script used in the Gupta Empire in India, the Tibetan script was developed under the Tibetan Empire in the seventh century and is credited to minister Tonmi Sambhota (b. 619?). Two important forms of the Tibetan script are “Uchen” (Tib. “having a head”), a standard type used in printed texts, and “Umey” (Tib. “headless”), a cursive form sometimes used in manuscripts. There are many other cursive and decorative forms of the script.

This painted scroll on silk represents the Paradise of (the of Healing, also known as the Medicine Buddha), set in a mountain landscape with the and , numerous attendants, celestial musicians, and minor deities. Bhaishajyaguru, seated on a lotus pedestal above a dais that bears a dedication inscription written in Tibetan and Chinese, is positioned at the center of the upper register, emphasizing the spiritual and visual importance of the dedication. The large letters of the Tibetan alphabet make the Tibetan cultural matrix clear. The Chinese characters are aligned horizontally, rather than vertically (the conventional arrangement), but the Chinese inscription gives more information than the Tibetan text. The Buddha is flanked by his two principal attendants: at his right, the white Bodhisattva of the Moon (Chandra), and at his left, the golden Bodhisattva of the Sun (Surya) (fig. 2). This relates to early representations of the Buddha of Healing in Central Asia and China, notably in Dunhuang, the crossroads of the Silk Road. Dunhuang is best known for the hundreds of Buddhist grottoes in the nearby Mogao Caves that were embellished from the fourth to the fourteenth centuries. Among the Dunhuang murals, this subject was so popular that ninety-seven images of Bhaishajyaguru paradises have been identified, from the Sui dynasty (581–618) to the Xixia period (1038–1227). In these murals, the buddha’s body is most frequently pictured with a blue or a pale flesh tint, occasionally white or, more rarely, red, while extant portable paintings from Dunhuang and Central Asia tend to represent his body as beige or gold, as seen here. 

The triad is surrounded by numerous small-scale bodhisattvas and gandharvas (celestial musicians) making offerings. The lower register depicts the two principal bodhisattvas—Manjushri mounted on his lion and Samantabhadra on his elephant beside the orchestra—above the Thousand-Armed at the center of the lower register. It is striking that the Buddha of Healing as well as Samantabhadra and Manjushri are all rendered following Chinese aesthetic models, with round faces, their bodies clothed in voluminous fabrics and robes, while the two bodhisattvas flanking the Buddha of Healing reflect Indo-Tibetan aesthetic models of agile bending slender bodies lightly garbed in diaphanous shawls and patterned , which became popular during the Tibetan rule over Dunhuang (787–866).

Historic Significance

This is one of the largest portable paintings from Dunhuang, although major portions of the lower register are missing. Historically, this painted scroll, recovered during the field mission of archaeologist Sir Aurel Stein to Dunhuang in 1917, is highly significant: the colors and silk are well conserved due to Dunhuang’s dry climate. It was also concealed for several centuries, allowing the bilingual Tibetan-Chinese inscriptions to remain legible. This is the earliest extant dated portable painting, a commission by Pelyang, a Tibetan monk then living in Dunhuang, with a Tibetan inscription, corresponding to 836. The dedications read, “In the year of the dragon, I, the monk Pelyang, for the benefit of my health and to transfer , commissioned in a group the images of Bhaishajyaguru; Samantabhadra; Manjushri-Kumara; a thousand-armed thousand-eyed Avalokiteshvara. . . .” The Chinese text indicates the date—the full moon, on the fifteenth day of the ninth month of the bing chen year (October 28, 836)—and that it was requested for merit on behalf of Pelyang’s deceased parents to be reborn in the peaceful celestial realm, the Dharmadhatu.

Iconography and Visual Conventions

Rather than a typical paradise of the Medicine Buddha, this group of deities reflects the personal preferences of the monk who commissioned the painting. The iconography of the buddha is distinctive: his right hand is raised toward his heart with the open palm facing right, a gesture reminiscent of the vitarka , the gesture of argumentation, simultaneously clasping a golden leaf of a medicinal plant between the thumb and forefinger. His left hand rests in his lap, holding a bowl of nectar. Later Tibetan representations typically portray this buddha as seated and dressed in monastic robes, with his right hand extended toward the ground, palm up, in the varada mudra of generosity and boon-bestowing, holding a myrobalan, a medicinal fruit, to present to those in need. In portable paintings the buddha’s body color may be beige or blue, the latter clearly linked to the lapis lazuli radiance attributed to the Buddha of Healing as described in his primary text, the Bhaishajyaguru Sutra, and in his ritual descriptions among the Dunhuang Tibetan documents: “The Buddha of Healing, the sovereign with the radiance of lapis lazuli.”

In this painting, the buddha’s physiognomy, garments, and posture correspond to aesthetic codes of Chinese Buddhist painting. His two attendant bodhisattvas are composed with the explicit asymmetry of posture seen in Indian treatises: seated with one leg pendent; their bodies as if in motion, implied by the angle of the head in contrast to the body bent slightly to one side; the head lengthened on one side and foreshortened on the other. This mode of dynamic representation as well as the visual contrast between the buddha’s round halo and the elliptical halos of his attendant bodhisattvas—depicted with narrow waists, slightly elongated limbs, and garments reflecting Indian printed fabrics—appear to be at variance with the Chinese aesthetic mode, yet the painting techniques are the same. The figures are drawn in pale ink, with the white or gold of the skin color, along with slight shading to give volume, added. Above this base, outlines of facial features and the garments’ fabrics are drawn in darker ink. This paradise of Bhaishajyaguru reveals the flourishing of Buddhist art during Tibetan rule precisely by its juxtaposition of two different modes of aesthetic depiction. The identical technique of line and coloring indicates that the same artists were responsible for the entire painting.

Comparative Examples from Dunhuang of the Tibetan Period

Many painted scrolls on linen, silk, or hemp made during the Tibetan rule of Dunhuang represent Buddhist deities and ritual diagrams that reflect the newly evolving Indo-Tibetan aesthetic as well as iconographies stemming from and rituals among the Tibetan Dunhuang manuscripts. There is special focus on Buddha , due to new translations of his and rituals, as in a drawing of Vairochana (fig. 3) and his entourage of buddhas and guardian deities. Images of bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara in several different aspects abound: Padmapani, Thousand-Armed Avalokiteshvara, Chintamanichakra Avalokiteshvara, and (fig. 4).

Line drawing featuring Buddha at center surrounded by concentric rings and square frames decorated with symbols and figures
Fig. 3

Mandala with the Five Dhyani (Meditation) Buddhas, symbolic of the five cosmic elements, identifiable as Vairochana (center), Amitabha (top), Ratnasambhava (left), Amoghasiddhi (right); and Akshobhya (bottom); Dunhuang, China; ca. 851–900; ink on paper; 17 5/8 × 15 7/8 in. (44.8 × 43.2 cm); field collection by Sir Marc Aurel Stein; British Museum; 1919,0101,0.173; photograph © The Trustees of the British Museum. All rights reserved

Rectangular textile depicting seated Bodhisattva surrounded by eight smaller deities against background of red and gold
Fig. 4

Mandala of Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara in Several Different Aspects: Padmapani, Thousand-Armed Avalokiteshvara, Chintamanichakra Avalokiteshvara, and Amoghapasha at center; Dunhuang, China; period of Tibetan rule (ca. 781–848); ink and colors on silk; 56 1/8 × 34 ¼ in. (142.5 × 87 cm); Musée national des arts asiatiques–Guimet, Paris; MG 26466; photograph © RMN–Grand Palais/Art Resource, NY

A painting of the of the Padmakula featuring eight deities of the Lotus (Padma) family, is centered on the dark, four-armed Amoghapasha, seated and holding the noose for which he is named, used to save beings from suffering (fig. 5). Regal with his triple-panel crown and a earring, multiple thin gold necklaces, and a sumptuous dhoti, he is surrounded by seven male and female deities, all seated within elliptical rainbow haloes. Their precise identification remains enigmatic. Two of them, holding a lotus in two arms and four arms, might be aspects of Avalokiteshvara. The protector can be recognized by the horse head in his crown; the White , to the left of Amoghapasha, holds a lotus in front of her chest; and perhaps the goddess , seated in the lower right corner, like Amoghapasha holds a noose and wears a makara earring on her right ear, as well as gold hoops on her left ear. There is extreme delicacy in the rendering of their expressive faces, naturalistic body poses, sinuous draping of the sacred thread (yajnopavita), and lithe bodies seated on the simplest of lotus pedestals. This composition reflects the inspiration of India, eschewing the aesthetic of Chinese Buddhist painting to a degree hitherto unknown among the portable paintings attributed to the period of Tibetan rule at Dunhuang. There is a blending of diverse elements of Indian, Central Asian, and Chinese Buddhist aesthetic modes that characterizes the majority of the murals and portable paintings of Dunhuang during Tibetan rule.

Deity with dark skin seated on lotus pedestal surrounded by seven smaller deities against green background
Fig. 5.

Deities of the Padmakula Mandala; Dunhuang, China; period of Tibetan rule (ca. 781–848); pigments on silk; 35¼ × 25⅝ in. (89.6 × 60 cm); Mission of Paul Pelliot, 1906–1908; Musée national des arts asiatiques–Guimet, Paris; EO 1131; photograph © RMN-Grand Palais/Art Resource, NY

Footnotes
1

I thank Roderick Whitfield for this information and discussion of the Dunhuang representations of the Buddha of Healing (personal communications March 2014 and August 2014), notably citing his student’s dissertation: Chih-hung Yen, "Bhaiṣajyaguru at Dunhuang." PhD diss., SOAS University of London.

2

Heather Karmay first translated the Tibetan and Chinese inscriptions, understanding the monk Pelyang to be both painter and donor, as well as a translator of bilingual texts. Roderick Whitfield subsequently modified the translation after additional infrared photography of the Chinese inscription revealed the monk Pelyang as sponsor, not as painter: Heather Karmay, Early Sino-Tibetan Art (Warminster: Aris and Phillips, 1975), 10; Roderick Whitfield, The Art of Central Asia: The Stein Collection in the British Museum, Vol. 1, Paintings from Dunhuang (Tokyo: Kodansha International, 1982), pl. 16. 

3

“Sman gyi bla be du rya ’od gyi rgyal po,” in Pelliot tibétain 247, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris, http://idp.bl.uk/database/oo_scroll_h.a4d?uid=3594404465;recnum=58640;index=1. See also Pelliot tibétain 248 Bibliothèque nationale de France; both texts are discussed in Marcelle Lalou, Inventaire des manuscrits tibétains de Touen-Houang conservés à la Bibliothèque nationale (fonds Pelliot tibétain), vol. 1 (Paris: Adrien Maisonneuve, 1939), 68–69. 

4

In his discussion of plate 47, perhaps featuring Padmapani, Roderick Whitfield cites Mario Bussagli for the Indian aesthetic principle of kshayavriddhi, “increase and decrease,” which results in the three-quarter view of the face, with the face turned to the left. The receding parts of the face are contracted and the nearer parts are enlarged: Roderick Whitfield, The Art of Central Asia: The Stein Collection in the British Museum, Vol. 1, Paintings from Dunhuang (Tokyo: Kodansha International, 1982), pl. 16, figs. 43–46; Mario Bussagli, Painting of Central Asia, trans. Lothian Small (Geneva: Skira, 1963), 32. See also British Museum 1919,0101,0.102, a banner painting: https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/A_1919-0101-0-102.

5

Roderick Whitfield, The Art of Central Asia: The Stein Collection in the British Museum, Vol. 1, Paintings from Dunhuang (Tokyo: Kodansha International, 1982), pl. 16. Whitfield’s description is quoted on the website of the British Museum, London, https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/A_1919-0101-0-32.

6

See https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/A_1919-0101-0-32; Nicole Vandier-Nicolas, Bannières et Peintures de Touen-Houang Conservées au Musée Guimet, Mission Paul Pelliot, sous la direction de Louis Hambis 14 (Paris: l’Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, 1974), 159–62; Louis Hambis, Bannières et Peintures de Touen-Houang conservées au Musée Guimet., Mission Paul Pelliot, documents archaeologiques publiés sous les auspices de l’Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres 15 (Paris: Imprimerie Nationale, 1976), pl. 86, “Mandala d’Amoghapasa (?),” for the first and most extensive discussion to date. It is also reproduced in Kimiaki Tanaka, “Mandala des Huit Divinités, section du Lotus,” in Sérinde, Terre de Bouddha Dix Siècles d’art sur la Route de la Soie, ed. Jacques Giès and M. Cohen, Exhibition catalog (Paris: Réunion des musées nationaux, 1995), 400–401; Karl Debreczeny, “Faith and Empire: An Overview,” in Faith and Empire: Art and Politics in Tibetan Buddhism, ed. Karl Debreczeny, Exhibition catalog (New York: Rubin Museum of Art, 2019), 19–51, http://issuu.com/rmanyc/docs/faith_and_empire, fig. 3.6.

Further Reading

Stoddard, Heather. 2008. Early Sino-Tibetan Art, 2nd ed. Bangkok: Orchid Press. Reprint of Karmay, Heather. 1975. 

Whitfield, Roderick. 1982. The Art of Central Asia: The Stein Collection in the British Museum, vol. 1, Paintings from Dunhuang. Tokyo: Kodansha International.

Citation

Amy Heller, “Bhaishajyaguru: Tibetan Visual Models on the Silk Road,” Project Himalayan Art, Rubin Museum of Art, 2023, https://rubinmuseum.org/projecthimalayanart/essays/bhaishajyaguru/.

bodhisattva

Language:
Sanskrit

In Buddhism, a bodhisattva is a being who has made a vow to become a buddha or awakened. In the Mahayana and Vajrayana traditions, many bodhisattvas are understood as deities with enormous powers who delay their final enlightenment, remaining in the phenomenal world to help suffering beings. Among such great bodhisattvas are Avalokiteshvara, Manjushri, Vajrapani, and Maitreya.

Buddha

Language:
Sanskrit

In Buddhism and Bon, a buddha is understood as a being who practices good deeds for many lifetimes, and finally, through intense meditation, achieves nirvana, or ”awakening”—a state beyond suffering, free from the cycle of birth and death. “The Buddha” of our age is Shakyamuni, or Siddhartha Gautama. He is considered the founding teacher of the religion we call Buddhism. The buddha prior to Shakyamuni was called Dipamkara, and the next buddha will be Maitreya. These are known as Buddhas of the Three Times. Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhists believe that there are infinite buddhas in infinite universes, who have many bodies or emanations. Other important buddhas include Amitabha, Vairochana, Bhaishajyaguru, Maitreya, and many more.

iconography

In the Himalayan context, iconography refers to the forms found in religious images, especially the attributes of deities: body color, number of arms and legs, hand gestures, poses, implements, and retinue. Often these attributes are specified in ritual texts (sadhanas), which artists are expected to follow faithfully.

merit

Alternate terms:
punya (Sanskrit), sonam (Tibetan)

In Buddhism, merit is accumulated positive karma, or positive actions, that lead to positive results, such as better rebirths. Buddhists gain merit by reciting mantras, donating to monasteries and those in need, performing pilgrimages, commissioning artworks, reproducing and reciting Buddhist texts, and other deeds with good intentions. It is believed that merit can also be transferred to others through rituals performed to gain merit for deceased family members help them achieve a better rebirth. Merit making is an important motivation for positive ritual action, and is a prerequisite for success of religious and even secular activity.

Silk Roads

Alternate terms:
Silk Routes

“Silk Roads” is a term broadly used to describe the long-distance trade routes across Central Asia that connected the Indian Subcontinent with East Asia and the Mediterranean world. These trade routes were highly important in transmitting both art and ideas across the Asian continent, including the Buddhist religion. There were many “silk roads”—some crossed the deserts of Central Asia, other maritime routes also connected Europe, the Middle East, Africa, South, Southeast, and East Asia.

Tibetan script

The Tibetan script is used to write the Tibetan language, as well as several other smaller Himalayan languages. Based on the Brahmi script used in the Gupta Empire in India, the Tibetan script was developed under the Tibetan Empire in the seventh century and is credited to minister Tonmi Sambhota (b. 619?). Two important forms of the Tibetan script are “Uchen” (Tib. “having a head”), a standard type used in printed texts, and “Umey” (Tib. “headless”), a cursive form sometimes used in manuscripts. There are many other cursive and decorative forms of the script.