Anne Nishimura Morse
William and Helen Pounds Senior Curator of Japanese Art Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
November 27, 2018; 6–7PM
807 Schermerhorn Hall
Buddhist paintings from Nara dating to the Heian and Kamakura periods have been characterized as being conservative, merely perpetuating the styles of the eighth century. An examination of Mandala of the Hosso School and other works, however, reveals that they were invented to be the focus of new rituals required by the religious community in the ancient capital at a time when the Japanese were responding to the onset of the Age of the End of the Buddhist Law.