Index
Rupa
- From: Gautama Vajra Vajracharya <gvvajrac@facstaff.wisc.edu>
- To: Members of the list <indology@liverpool.ac.uk>
- Subject: Buddha's Image
- Dear Prof. Rabe,
- The passage that you are looking for is given in diTThijAla
- section of DIghanikAya 1. 7. 147-148. It refers to the
- invisibility of the Buddha after his parinirvANa
- "kAyassa bhedA uddhaM jIvitapariyAdAnA na naM dakkhanti devamanussA".
- The aniconic tradition of Indian art is indeed very fascinating. I have
- been working on this issue for many years. I believe the words rUpa and
- arUpa are very helpful to understand the aniconic phenomena of Indic visual
- tradition. For example, Indian coins, minted before the subcontinent came
- to contact with Greco-Roman tradition, do not bear any representation of a
- human figure. Those coins in a sense are arUpa "without a figure". Later
- Indian coins began to include a figure as exemplified by Kaniska's coin
- bearing Buddha's image identified as 'boddo'. This coin is actually a rUpi
- "having a figure". Because of this new development Indian coins received the
- new name rUpi (modern rupee for Indian currency). Pali literature is full
- of rUpa and arupa classification of supernatural beings and things. With
- this new approach, I am tying to solve the old problem.
- [paragraph omitted]
- Gautama Vajracharya
- Department of Art History
- University of Wisconsin
- Madison, WI 53705
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