The creation of monumental icons of the Buddha constitutes an important chapter in the history of Buddhist image worship. By the eight century, colossal sculptures hewn from the living rock marked the Buddhist world from Central Asia to China, Western India, and Sri Lanka, yet the phenomenon of Buddhist monumentality has been largely overlooked. In Sri Lanka, the placement and function of colossal rock-cut sculptures in the landscape suggest that these types of images were closely linked to long-distance travel and trade and formed a local network of monumentality interwoven with myth and with the formation of a Buddhist collective memory. Colossal sculptures proliferated at a time of great mobility across the Buddhist world, and they may have also functioned as visual markers within a transnational Buddhist network that spanned South Asia.

Monumental Rock-cut Images from Sri Lanka: New Perspectives

Pia Brancaccio
2020-01-01

Abstract

The creation of monumental icons of the Buddha constitutes an important chapter in the history of Buddhist image worship. By the eight century, colossal sculptures hewn from the living rock marked the Buddhist world from Central Asia to China, Western India, and Sri Lanka, yet the phenomenon of Buddhist monumentality has been largely overlooked. In Sri Lanka, the placement and function of colossal rock-cut sculptures in the landscape suggest that these types of images were closely linked to long-distance travel and trade and formed a local network of monumentality interwoven with myth and with the formation of a Buddhist collective memory. Colossal sculptures proliferated at a time of great mobility across the Buddhist world, and they may have also functioned as visual markers within a transnational Buddhist network that spanned South Asia.
2020
Inglese
Adam Hardy and Laxmi Greaves
Bridging Heaven and Earth: Art and Architecture in South Asia
contributo
European Association for South Asian Archaeology (EASAA 23), University of Cardiff, Wales, UK, July 2016
2
1
9
9
9381406979
Dev Publisher
Delhi
INDIA
Comitato scientifico
4-8 Luglio 2016
University of Cardiff, Wales, UK
Internazionale
Sri Lanka, Avukana, Buddhist sculpture, monumentality, Indian Ocean
no
1
Brancaccio, Pia
open
273
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
4 Contributo in Atti di Convegno (Proceeding)::4.1 Contributo in Atti di convegno
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11574/237961
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