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Stone Bato-Kannon Bosatsu bodhisattva Buddha Jizo
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Stone Bato-Kannon Bosatsu bodhisattva Buddha Jizo
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Up for auction is a stone depiction of a standing Bato-Kannon (Horse-Head Kannon) Bosatsu, clearly dated to the sixth year of the Taisho Era (1917).
Of Kannon Bosatsu's 33manifestations, only one, Bato-Kannon, glowers menacingly upon theworld. In Japan, Bato-Kannon's irate glare is generally held to express the notion that anger, if properly focused, can be a positive force in clearing away the obstacles on one's path to enlightenment. Although Bato-Kannon is generally believed to derive from the Hindu deity Hayagriva, whose head is that of a horse, the personality and symbolic thrust of the two gods are in fact quite different, Hayagriva being depicted almost invariably as calmingly serene. An alternative view on the question of the origin of Bato-Kannon's horse-head iconography cites a Hindu myth in which Vishnu transforms himself into a large horse-head with the intention of frightening off a would-be detractor of Brahma. Inasmuch as it offers consistency in terms both of the actual iconography and its accompanying symbolic purport, the Vishnu/Brahma tale theory is persuasive. Early Japanese depictions of Bato-Kannon, the oldest dating to the 8th century, are of wood or bronze and invariably display a wrathful mien. In the case of Bato-Kannon images in stone, the first examples seem to have appeared during the mid-Edo Period, by which time the collective popular understanding had seized upon the misapprehension that Bato-Kannon, like Kannon's 32 other manifestations, was not wrathful but compassionate. In view of the horse-head perched atop the head of all Bato-Kannon images, moreover, Bato-Kannon was popularly believed to aid and protect horses and, by extension, other working animals as well as their human masters. Only in Japan did such an interpretive shift in Bato-Kannon's personality and symbolic meaning occur, and it is tfore only in Japan that one will find a significant number of Bato-Kannon depictions. Most are executed in stone, stone being the sculptural medium most suitable for placement along roadsides and other outdoor locations w horses tend to pass or gather. The vast majority of stone examples depict Bato-Kannon not as aggressively fearsome but as serenely compassionate. Stone Bato-Kannon images have a protective as opposed to memorial function. Accordingly, dealers and collectors in the local market value stone depictions of Bato-Kannon much more highly than they do stone images of Jizo Bosatsu, for example, all other price-relevant factors being equal. Another factor that tends to buoy market prices for examples of this intriguing deity is the relatively small number of extant Bato-Kannon stone images. With the Meiji Restoration (1868) came the advent of rapid industrialization and a concomitant decrease in the employment of beasts of burden. Accordingly, one rarely encounters a stone Bato-Kannon piece postdating the Taisho Era (1912-1926). Dimensions: Height: 35.5 cm (14.0 in) Width: 15.1 cm (5.9 in) Depth: 13.8 cm (5.4 in) Packaged weight: 10 kg (22 lb) Shipping information: Surface mail shipping and insurance for this piece will be US$64 for Europe, North America, and Oceania. SAL wait-list airmail shipping and insurance will be US$116 for Europe, North America, and Oceania. EMS airmail shipping and insurance will be US$148 for Europe and US$129 for North America and Oceania. Thank you for viewing this listing.
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