[Buddha-l] LA County Museum exhibit of art: The Way of theElders
JKirkpatrick
jkirk at spro.net
Tue Jul 12 15:09:53 MDT 2011
Geoff
Thanks for the amusing and heartening reply.
Joanna
-----Original Message-----
From: buddha-l-bounces at mailman.swcp.com
[mailto:buddha-l-bounces at mailman.swcp.com] On Behalf Of Geoff
Morrison
Sent: Monday, July 11, 2011 10:39 PM
To: Buddhist discussion forum
Subject: Re: [Buddha-l] LA County Museum exhibit of art: The Way
of theElders
Rumor to the contrary, the are, in fact, many art lovers on this
list. Thanks for letting the rest of the list members know about
the Los Angeles County Museum of Art's (LACMA) exhibit, "The Way
of the Elders: The Buddha in Modern Theravada Traditions,"
consisting of slightly more than a dozen items from LACMA's
Southeast Asia Collection, but definitely worth a visit to LACMA
for the value of this exhibition alone, IMHO. If you happen to
live in Southern California or will be visiting same by March,
2012, the representations of Buddha await you at LACMA. As Leo,
the Lion, advises art lovers, at the beginning of any MGM film,
by roaring out "Ars gratia artis," or "art for art's sake,"
credited to Théophile Gautier, who was supposed to have been the
first to use "l'art pour l'art" as a slogan, which Louis B.
Mayer, the "M" in MGM, Latinized for Leo's benefit, in the lion's
cameo appearance inside the MGM Logo. If any of the list members
are interested in viewing this exhibit of modern renderings of
Buddha, "roar" on over to LACMA to have a look. (No play upon
words intended here, of course.)
Metta,
Geoff Morrison
________________________________
From: JKirkpatrick <jkirk at spro.net>
To: 'Buddhist discussion forum' <buddha-l at mailman.swcp.com>
Sent: Monday, July 11, 2011 6:11 PM
Subject: [Buddha-l] LA County Museum exhibit of art: The Way of
the Elders
If there are any art lovers on this list, which I rather doubt
but just in case, please see this LA County Museum website on the
Way of the Elders:
http://lacma.wordpress.com/2011/07/11/highlights-of-the-way-of-th
e-elders/
The page opens with a wonderful image of the walking Buddha, a
rarely seen sculptural concept (in India anyway) except in Burma,
and sometimes in Thailand.
My guess as to why is that the southeast Asians developed sitting
and walking meditation beyond what the Indians practised--Indian
iconography of Buddha emphasises the sitting posture. Walking
meditation is as important in SE Asian Buddhism as sitting. In
Bagan, northern Burma, there are wonderful carved wooden figures
of the walking Buddha in several of the big famous pagodas.
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