ASIAN ART
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Buddhist Paintings Return to Korea from US It used to be one of the largest traditional Korean paintings in the US, held in the Los Angeles County Museum of Arts (LACMA) collection, but now this painting, along with others, have returned home. The Joseon-dynasty (1392-1910) works recently restituted are Yeongsanhoesangdo (Preaching Shakyamuni Buddha), from 1755, and three portraits from Siwangdo (the Kings of Hell, 1798), which were originally housed in the Sinheung temple (Sinheungsa) in Sokcho, Gangwon Province, in northeastern South Korea. These works were believed to have been looted during the Korean War (1950-53) in the early 1950s. The large Yoengsanhoesangdo painting, in ink and mineral colours on silk, depicts the historical Buddha Seokgamoni (Shakyamuni) preaching at the Vulture Peak in India and was acquired by LACMA in 1998, but was so damaged that it was not displayed to the public until 2012 after it had undergone conservation. When acquired, the painting had been cut into six irregular pieces and had suffered from extensive loss of
pigment; during the conservation effort the separated pieces were reattached, losses patched, and missing areas of pigment inpainted. The painting presents a visionary scene of the Buddha surrounded by a host of enlightened beings, including bodhisattvas, as well as the Hindu gods Indra and Brahma and the Guardian Kings of the four cardinal directions, inspired by the Lotus Sutra, a pivotal text of Mahayana (Great Vehicle) Buddhism. In 2015, the Jogye Order in Korea initiated a request to look into the ownership of several Korean paintings in LACMA’s collection. A letter received in the January 2015 to Director Michael Govan from the Jogye Order indicated that several Korean Buddhist paintings in LACMA’s collection had been reported stolen from their temples in Korea. The first of these, Jijang Siwangdo (Ksitigarbha and the Kings of Hell), had been first reported in 1988 as stolen from the Yeombulan Hermitage, a Buddhist monastery, and the order requested any known
Yeongsanhoesangdo (Preaching Shakyamuni Buddha) in LACMA’s Korean Art galleries in 2012
information regarding the work’s provenance. In 2015, after research by head of the Chinese, Korean, and South and Southeast Asian Art department and Korean art associate curator Virginia Moon, it was
revealed that Jijang Siwangdo was acquired by LACMA in 1994. However, the painting had been widely published in the US from 1991 onwards. The painting was returned in 2017.
news in brief RYUKYU KINGDOM, UNESCO Click here for more information
During the summer UNESCO, Japanese authorities and experts discussed the response following the devastating fire of October 2019 at the Shuri-jo site, part of the World Heritage site Gusuku Sites and Related Properties of the Kingdom of Ryukyu in Okinawa. The large fire had a significant impact on the Shuri-jo site and affected a number of reconstructed buildings, including the Seiden (state hall), part of a symbolic construction of the site, as well as some underground remains. The ravaged buildings were replica structures, constructed after 1989 on the basis of detailed documentation, which assisted in the visual interpretation of the property’s Outstanding Universal Value (OUV). Immediately after the fire occurred, Japan expressed its intention to restore the property and devoted a great deal of energy and resources to carrying out emergency works. This included an exhaustive investigation and restoration of the damaged parts of the archaeological remains. A work schedule to rebuild the state hall was established at the end of March 2020, and its implementation began this summer.
SHIMAO STONE AGE SETTLEMENT, CHINA
Shimao is a Neolithic site situated in China’s Loess Plateau. For decades villages believed the crumbling rock walls near their homes were part of the Great Wall, as parts of this ancient battlement zigzag through this arid region inside the northern loop of the Yellow River, marking the frontier of Chinese rule that stretches back more than 2,000 years. However, locals – and then looters – began finding jade artefacts amongst the rubble. Jade is not indigenous to this northernmost part of Shaanxi Province, the nearest source is almost a thousand
As to the recently returned paintings, subsequent research in 2016 and a site visit to Sinheungsa in 2017 by curators Stephen Little and Virginia Moon had confirmed that Sinheungsa was the temple for which the paintings were commissioned in the 18th century, and in which the paintings were hanging in early 1954. As a result of the accumulated evidence, the works were deaccessioned and returned to Korea. In exchange for the return of these sacred works of art to Korea, and in recognition of LACMA’s conservation of these works, the Jogye Order has agreed to collaborate with LACMA on various cultural initiatives, including loans of artwork from each institution to the other for short- and long-term special exhibitions, presentations of related educational programs, and exchanges of human resources. Click here to read more about the history of the paintings and their journey home in curator Stephen Little’s blog post
Inside
2 Profile: the artist Karishma D’Souza 5 In conversation with multi-disciplinary artist Xu Zhen 7 Eastern Encounters, Indian paintings on show in Edinburgh 8 The art of Javanese shadow theatre in Zurich 10 Restoration of Pha That Luang in Vientiane, Laos 12 Samurai, exploring the world of Japanese warrirors, in Adelaide 14 From the Archives: The Dragon’s Gift, The Sacred Arts of Bhutan 16 The world of miniature paintings revealed in Istanbul 17 Exhibitions in Paris, Frankfurt, Toronto, Kansas City, and Salem 20 Gallery shows in New York, Paris, and New Delhi 22 Auction previews 23 Islamic Arts Diary
Next issue October 2020 Includes a guide to Asian Art in London
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