Buddha's teachings, encapsulated in the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path, offer guidance on transcending suffering and attaining liberation from the cycle of birth, death, and rebirth (samsara). The Four Noble Truths expound on the nature of suffering, its origins, its cessation, and the pathway to its cessation.
Meanwhile, the Eightfold Path delineates principles for ethical conduct, mental cultivation, and wisdom, culminating in the attainment of Nirvana a state of supreme tranquility and enlightenment.
Buddha's compassionate ethos emphasizes mindfulness, compassion, and non-violence, profoundly influencing countless adherents worldwide to lead lives of ethical integrity and spiritual evolution. His enduring legacy continues to resonate universally, providing a beacon of hope and wisdom for seekers of inner peace, enlightenment, and liberation from suffering.
The genesis of the Buddha icon itself is one of art history's well-surveyed developments -in this case, a synthesis of post- Alexander Greco-Roman elements imported into Gandhara (vast Buddhist lands to the northwest of India), with others indigenous to India's own plastic traditions dating back even as far as the seals and figurines of the Indus Valley civilization. So when the aniconic eventually gives way, around the second century AD, to the massive Buddha 'primitives' of Mathura, soon to be followed, at the end of the fifth century AD, by "a perfection, unbearable almost in its flawlessness" (Kramrisch) at Sarnath, we seem to re- enter the dawn of the world. Figures move about and have their being in a garden paradise, the flowers of which are their own bodies in fragile bloom.
The Sarnath Buddha, belonging to the fifth century , is the supreme masterpiece of the Sarnath school. The imperturbable poise of this sculptured figure, its almost ethereal delicacy and spirituality, the youthful pliancy of the body, the balance and harmony of its contours, including its radiant halo, the sublime serenity, lift it to the highest level of subtlety. Its effect of sublime monumentality is achieved through rigorous stylistic simplification: a conjunction between the equilateral triangle of the body's seated stability and the circles of the head and its supportive halo. The proportions of the masses, particularly the ascending direction of the hands against the poised inhalation of the chest and the broad shoulders, give the body the effect of lightness, of buoyancy, of an inheld movement upward and uplifting.
Buddha's head resembles the full moon and is indeed one of the most perfectly spherical in all Buddhist iconography -like a bubble -yet deeply inward oriented. The eyes gaze downward, not directly at, but into the viewer; yet the arching eyelids, rhymed by eyebrows that lift intelligently and diagonally upward, are so accented by the light falling on their curvature that they seem to flash and flicker into a climax of irresistibly ascending energy .The very fine high-grade surface seems to have a soft bloom -a specially distinctive Sarnath quality, carried, here, to the highest degree of refinement. Viewed frontally, the orb of the head recedes towards the halo with unearthly receptivity; viewed slightly to the side, the head presses forward and the smile becomes mobile, outreaching.
'And the fingers, touching each other, form the circle of the chain of causes, thus giving what is known as a mudra, a hand signal representing an idea, this particular sign being that of pratitya-samutpada, 'coming into existence by being conditioned by a preceding cause' .The reference is to the Buddha's idea that the concatenation of all conditioned phenomena is rooted in science and a consequent will to live, which give rise to birth and death, which in turn are the support of the ever- revolving wheel of causes with their effects, conditioning and dissolving each other, world without end. Convert science into enlightenment and the whole figment of conditioned experience dissolves".
Heinrich Zimmer, The Art of lndian Asia, New York, 1955, pp. 142-3.
The Buddha's drapery is conceived as a diaphanous cloth: which caresses the body's contours. Disciplined by yoga, the Enlightened One is seated in the 'lotus posture' of padmasana. A lotus-like circlet of drapery fans outwards from below this model body, combining plenteous convexity and indrawing recession to suggest, deep within, a rich interiority of being, like a pot brimming with water. Indeed, it would seem that the master who sculpted this image could well have begun life, like many an Indian artificer of images, as a potter. The major forms of the whole piece seem to have been fashioned with the memory of the barely audible potter's wheel whirring at the back of the sculpItor' s mind as he smoothed over the undulations of limbs, the paradisal sun-disc of the halo, and the beautifully expanded chest.
How to care for Wood Statues?
Wood is extensively used in sculpting especially in countries like China, Germany, and Japan. One feature that makes the wood extremely suitable for making statues and sculptures is that it is light and can take very fine detail. It is easier for artists to work with wood than with other materials such as metal or stone. Both hardwoods, as well as softwood, are used for making sculptures. Wood is mainly used for indoor sculptures because it is not as durable as stone. Changes in weather cause wooden sculptures to split or be attacked by insects or fungus. The principal woods for making sculptures and statues are cedar, pine, walnut, oak, and mahogany. The most common technique that sculptors use to make sculptures out of wood is carving with a chisel and a mallet. Since wooden statues are prone to damage, fire, and rot, they require proper care and maintenance.
It is extremely important to preserve and protect wooden sculptures with proper care. A little carelessness and negligence can lead to their decay, resulting in losing all their beauty and strength. Therefore, a regular clean-up of the sculptures is a must to prolong their age and to maintain their shine and luster.
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