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Anguo Temple: Vajrapani Bodhisattva

Marble

Anguo Temple: Vajrapani Bodhisattva

CHINA, Shaanxi, Xi’an; Tang dynasty

The statue is one of many sculptures excavated from the site of Anguo Temple in 1959. The Bodhisattva has a wrathful expression with hair that fans out behind him in a wave. The eyes protrude from their sockets while fangs curve upward from his mouth. The figure’s muscular body is adorned with a necklace and large earrings fall to the shoulders, while a flowing stole emphasizes the dynamic posture of the turning body. The left arm is broken while the right is lifted and probably once held the vajra that is this guardian figure’s attribute. The figure sits in half lotus position on a layered rock over which the skirt tumbles.

For more details, go to the Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture A-F, page 50.

Cite this article:

Hsingyun, et al. "Anguo Temple: Vajrapani Bodhisattva." Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture A-F, vol. 10, 2016, pp. 50.
Hsingyun, Youheng, Yann Lovelock, Yuan Chou, Susan Huntington, Gary Edson, and Robert Neather. 2016. "Anguo Temple: Vajrapani Bodhisattva" In Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture A-F, 10:50.
Hsingyun, Youheng, Lovelock, Y., Chou, Y., Huntington, S., Edson, G., & Neather, R.. (2016). Anguo Temple: Vajrapani Bodhisattva. In Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture A-F (Vol. 10, pp. 50).
@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 A-F},
pages = 50,
title = {{Anguo Temple: Vajrapani Bodhisattva}},
volume = 10,
year = {2016}}


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