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Kiyomizudera Temple Main Hall: Garuda

Cypress wood

Kiyomizudera Temple Main Hall: Garuda

JAPAN, Kyoto; Muromachi period

The statue is located in the temple’s main hall. It depicts garuda and is assembled from several pieces of cypress wood which were painted and gilded. The garuda is one of the Twenty-Eight Classes of Dharma Protectors. The figure has a bird’s head and wings, a human body, and is playing the flute. It wears an openwork headdress featuring a Dharma wheel with a stupa above it. A flaming Dharma wheel nimbus frames the head from behind. The garuda is dressed in full armor and has a fluttering stole that rises in an arc behind the shoulders. The stole is buckled under a belt as it falls down the length of the body.

For more details, go to the Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture G-M, page 534.

Cite this article:

Hsingyun, et al. "Kiyomizudera Temple Main Hall: Garuda." Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture G-M, vol. 11, 2016, pp. 534.
Hsingyun, Youheng, Yann Lovelock, Yuan Chou, Susan Huntington, Gary Edson, and Robert Neather. 2016. "Kiyomizudera Temple Main Hall: Garuda" In Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture G-M, 11:534.
Hsingyun, Youheng, Lovelock, Y., Chou, Y., Huntington, S., Edson, G., & Neather, R.. (2016). Kiyomizudera Temple Main Hall: Garuda. In Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture G-M (Vol. 11, pp. 534).
@misc{Hsingyun2016,
author = Hsingyun and Youheng and Lovelock, Yann and Chou, Yuan and Huntington, Susan and Edson, Gary and Neather, Robert,
booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture G-M},
pages = 534,
title = {{Kiyomizudera Temple Main Hall: Garuda}},
volume = 11,
year = {2016}}


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