This book describes, analyses and reproduces line
drawings from two manuscripts and a related section from a third
manuscript. These are: 1) Manuscript M.82.169.2, preserved in the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art (circa late nineteenth century) 2)
Manuscript 82.242.1-24, preserved in the Newark Museum (from the later
part of the twentieth century) and 3) A section from manuscript 440 in
the private collection of Ian Alsop, Santa Fe, New Mexico (early
twentieth century). The line drawings depict Hindu/Saiva and Buddhist
deities and themes, but the Buddhist material is predominant, as one
would expect in artists sketchbooks from Patan.
The sketchbooks are
important for several reasons. They provide drawings of a large number
of deities, including some groups rarely depicted elsewhere.
Among them are the Eight Great Bodhisattvas, the Eight Siddhas, the Nine
Serpents and-corresponding to the months of the year-twelve forms of
Narayana and Lokesvara, and (associated with the ekadasi days of the
months) twelve forms of Mahadeva. Many of the deities and legends are
relevant to contemporary Newar Buddhism.
The two narratives are of
special interest. They deal with the life story of Sakyamuni Buddha and
the legend of Sarvajnamitra (pada). The illustrated life story of the
Buddha follows the Newar tradition, which incorporates the episodes of
the sufferings of Yasodhara after Sarvarthasiddhas departure and of the
Buddhas (return) journey to Lumbini (lumbiniyatra). The book also
contains a longer section on Sristikarta Lokesvara, a form of
Avalokitesvara who emanates Brahmanical divinities from his body.
AUTHOR: Gudrun Buhnemann is Professor in the Department of Languages and Cultures of Asia at The University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA. Her recent publications include The Iconography of Hindu Tantric Deities (2 volumes, Groningen, 2000-01), Mandalas and Yantras in the Hindu Traditions (Leiden, 2003; New Delhi, 2007), Eighty-four Asanas in Yoga.
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