19 lines of embroidered characters in blue, brown, beige, and green; red spots; decorative border

Chapter 9 of the Lotus Sutra, early 14th century

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The Lotus Sutra teaches that salvation is attainable for all living beings and states explicitly that women may also become buddhas. This straightforward teaching made it one of the most influential Buddhist scriptures and a particularly popular one, especially among women. Very little is known about the early production of embroidered Buddhist sutras like this one. But as most surviving examples are transcriptions of the Lotus Sutra, it is highly likely that women created them. Creating these extravagant sutras, first transcribed in ink and then embroidered with colored silk and lavishly decorated with gold and silver, was an act of devotion. This work is but one small fragment—19 lines of a single chapter from a sutra consisting of some 28 chapters—of what must have been a set of numerous handscrolls.

Details
Title
Chapter 9 of the Lotus Sutra
Role
Artist
Accession Number
2015.79.451
Catalogue Raisonne
Murase, Art through a Lifetime, no. 842
Curator Approved

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19 lines of embroidered characters in blue, brown, beige, and green; red spots; decorative border