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Buddhist Art and Architecture in Japan

2010
When Buddhism entered Japan in the sixth century, its sculpture, painting, architecture, and texts—and the sophisticated technologies used to produce them—played a major role in attracting new adherents. These materials came to be viewed as “art” only with Japan’s participation in international exhibitions and the domestic development of museums during
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Buddhist Art and Architecture in Tibet

2018
Tibetan Buddhists view images primarily as religious supports and secondarily as works of art. Buddhist images are aimed at improving one’s karma by earning merit in view of future existences, at removing obstacles, and at creating wellbeing. Their commissioning may be occasioned by various circumstances, including illness and death, besides the need ...
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Buddhist Art and Architecture In China

2012
Buddhist art has played a crucial role in the dissemination and development of Buddhism in China, which began in the Eastern Han period (25–220 ce). Rigorous scholarship on the works as objects of art, however, began only in the early 20th century, primarily by Japanese and Western scholars, who had access to Buddhist images in China and in their ...
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Buddhist Art and Architecture in India

2015
As Leoshko demonstrates in her Sacred Traces: British Explorations of Buddhism in South Asia (2003), the early development of historical study of Buddhist art and architecture in India is closely linked to the British discovery of Buddhism. It began with the reports of the explorations of the Buddhist sites in northern India conducted by Alexander ...
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Donors, Buddhist Art

The Encyclopedia of Ancient History, 2021
Kate Lingley
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The Buddhist art in the Buddha's footprint

2016
Journal of Thai Interdisciplinary Research, Vol.11, No ...
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On the Development of Early Buddhist Art in India

The Art Bulletin, 1958
IN the mountains of Bombay State in western India, some two thousand years ago, a series of rock-cut halls were dedicated by the early devotees of Buddhism. Recalling an age of great faith and patronage, these excavated sanctuaries represent one of the most important sources of our knowledge of early Indian art and history. They are of two basic types:
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Buddhist Art and Architecture on the "Silk Road"

2011
The “Silk Roads,” a term first coined by the German geographer Baron Ferdinand von Richthofen in 1877, refers to the east–west overland trading routes crossing Central Asia that for centuries served as the conduit for the transmission not only of consumer goods such as silk textiles, but also of religions, including Buddhism.
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Virtual reality art as an innovative Buddhist learning tool

Int. J. Arts Technol., 2021
Gomesh Karnchanapayap   +1 more
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