Status

Status
Inactive

Your details

E-mail:

Update your details || || Logout

Navigation


In this section:


Sacred Word and Image: Five World Religions on view at Phoenix Art Museum

— January 2012

Associated media

Portable Shrine,  Japan, 19th century. Coloured pigments and gold foil on lacquered cypress (hinoki) wood; 4 x 3 in. (10. Collection of Phoenix Art Museum, Estate of Carolann Smurthwaite

Sacred Word and Image: Five World Religions, an exhibition that opened on 4 January 2012 at Phoenix Art Museum, features the written word and painted image as expressed in the cultures of Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism and Christianity throughout the past 1500 years.  The exhibition, on view through 25 March 2012, draws from the collections of Phoenix Art Museum and several prominent private collections, and includes a variety of materials used to document mankind’s significant thoughts and beliefs, including everything from paper, palm leaf and vellum, to wood, lacquer, metal and ivory.

Dr Janet Baker, Curator of Asian Art, Phoenix Art Museum, commented: ‘In some instances, complete illustrated manuscripts allow us to understand the original artistic and literary vision of the scribe and illustrator.  Other examples preserve the decorative and illustrative images, which tell a visual story that is linked to one of the major tenets of a religious faith.  These sacred objects were created to be used as part of rituals and celebrations within their religious traditions.’

The exhibition is presented through five themes.

Sacred spaces and places

The veneration of holy relics has a long tradition in Christian and Buddhist practices. Depictions of religious structures associated with events in the lives of Jesus, Buddha or Mohammed are often shown on reliquaries (containers in which relics were kept), and represent places to which adherents hope to make pilgrimages.  In Islam, prayer mats or rugs create a holy space for the sacred act of devotion by an individual wherever they might be at the time of daily calls to prayer.  In Buddhism, reliquaries were made to enshrine sacred relics of the Buddha.  In 7th-century Japan, the imperial sponsorship of Buddhism led to the creation of one million examples of small wooden multi-tiered pagodas in which a printed prayer was placed.  These printed prayers now constitute one of the oldest examples of printing in the world.  

Language as transmission

In Islam, the original language of the prophet Mohammed was Arabic, and it is the only one acceptable for use to maintain the perfection of the divine word as transmitted from Allah.  Likewise, in Sri Lankan Buddhism, Pali script is used for sacred texts though the spoken language of the people using them today is different.  The Jewish prophets wrote in the Hebrew Bible about the covenantal relationship between the people of Israel and God as well as other major events in their history.  The writers of the Gospels and other New Testament books of the Christian Bible recorded events such as Christ’s birth, teachings, crucifixion and resurrection.  Early Buddhist writers recorded the major events of the Buddha’s life, such as his birth, departure from his home, and his quest for enlightenment. 

Otherworldly visions and miraculous events

In much of Christianity, Islam and Buddhism, the belief in the life to come following our earthly existence has resulted in heavenly visions of places where suffering and evil are replaced by experiences of eternal peace, joy or enlightenment.  The lives of Jesus, Mohammed and Buddha are filled with miraculous events that transcend ordinary human experience and mark these individuals as divinely inspired beings.  In Catholicism, the elevation of the Virgin Mary’s status led to the creation of icons and the practice of supplication to her for the alleviation of sins and suffering.  This concept of compassion is echoed in Buddhism’s Bodhisattvas, whose multiple eyes or hands represent their super-human abilities to observe suffering and thus grant blessings upon devotees.

Symbols of power

During much of the history of the world, literacy was very limited.  Thus, images and symbols became powerful tools to bring understanding of abstract concepts, divine beings and narrative stories to a greater number of potential believers.  In Buddhism, the lotus flower is a symbol of purity, and the footprint of the Buddha is a symbol of his divine presence.  Other motifs, such as the cross in Christianity, symbolize the pivotal events, in this case Christ’s crucifixion for the redemption of mankind.  High-ranking Buddhist monks wear crowns to imbue them with special powers, while Christian bishops and priests may wear crowns to indicate their status within the church hierarchy.

Divine beauty

Hinduism, Buddhism and Christianity use images of perfected or transcendent human beauty and specific physical features to convey the divinity of spiritual beings.  Judaism and Islam are traditions which include fewer figurative images in sacred art because of the Second Commandment, which prohibits the creation of any idol in the likeness of created things.  In Hinduism, deities portrayed with animal features and multiple arms or heads are based on literary traditions that describe their super-human personalities and powers.  In Buddhism, the image of the historical Buddha conforms to specific texts that describe the ideal proportions and features of the Buddha.  The Christian ideals of beauty as depicted in images of the Virgin Mary and infant Jesus are imbued with purity, maternal femininity and child-like innocence and divinity. 

To document this special exhibition, an electronic catalogue has been created.  This will allow the maximum number of interested ‘visitors’ to appreciate the riches of the written word and image and how it shapes our understanding of ourselves in both historical and current perspectives. 

Sacred Word and Image: Five World Religions is organized by Phoenix Art Museum.  The exhibition is presented by US Bancorp Foundation and US Bank Private Client Reserve.  Support provided by Amy S. Clague, Coleene and Barry Fernando, Dr Dhira Mahoney, and Ana and James Melikian.


Other interesting content

Read news from the world of art