Fudō Myōō (Achala Vidyaraja)

Japan

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 223

Fudō is the most widely represented of the Buddhist deities known as Myōō, or Kings of Brightness. A fierce protector of the Buddhist law, he is a direct emanation of Dainichi Nyorai, the principal Buddha of Esoteric Buddhism. The first sculptures of Fudō Myōō made in Japan showed the figure seated, but standing examples like this one began to appear in the eleventh century. Fudō uses his sword to cut through ignorance and his lasso to reign in those who would block the path to enlightenment. The heavy weight of the shoulders and back is planted firmly on the stiffened legs, appropriate for a deity whose name means “the Immovable One.” This statue, composed of six hollowed-out pieces of wood, was formerly the central icon at Kuhonji Temple, northwest of Kyoto.

Fudō Myōō (Achala Vidyaraja), Wood with lacquer, gold leaf, and color; joined-woodblock construction (yosegi-zukuri), Japan

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