Sutra Fragment, Calligraphy in Block Script

Accession Number
2006/2.32

Title
Sutra Fragment, Calligraphy in Block Script

Artist(s)
Korean

Artist Nationality
Korean (culture or style)

Object Creation Date
15th century - 19th century

Medium & Support
gold ink on indigo-dyed paper

Dimensions
12 3/16 in. x 6 1/16 in. ( 31 cm x 15.4 cm )

Credit Line
Gift of Ellen and Richard Laing

Label copy

Sutra fragment, calligraphy in block script
Korea
Joseon dynasty (1392–1910) 15th–19th century
Gold ink on indigo-dyed paper Gift of Ellen and Richard Laing, 2006/2.32

Originally Buddhist teachings were transmitted orally; later they were written down. These texts are known as sutras. The spread of Buddhism from India throughout Asia meant Buddhist texts were translated and recorded in various languages and in a range of formats and materials, and scripts. Sutra copying has also been a popular and powerful form of worship and merit-making across Buddhist traditions. 

Some of the oldest known Buddhist manuscripts, which date to the first century, are from Gandhara (present day western Pakistan) and are written on birch bark. The sutra fragments from India on display here are incised on palm fronds, while a Korean example illustrates the use of indigo-dyed paper. While some of the sutra fragments have text in brushed calligraphy, others are printed with woodblocks. These variations were shaped by the producers’ cultures, the availability of materials and technologies, and the socio-economic level of the patron and/or copyist.

The sutras often promote the recitation, memorization, copying, and spread of Buddhist texts. One of the most popular, The Lotus Sutra, esteems someone who:

writes down or copies out even a single gāthā [verse] of the Lotus Sutra or who shall look with veneration on a scroll of this scripture as if it were the Buddha himself.

(translation by Leon Hurvitz)



 

Physical Description
An excerpt from the Lotus Sutra (Japanese: Myōhō Renge Kyō), this sutra uses gold pigment on indigo dyed paper.

Primary Object Classification
Painting

Primary Object Type
calligraphy

Collection Area
Asian

Rights
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