[KS] Re: Uisang Paiting

John Frankl jmfrankl at fas.harvard.edu
Wed Jun 21 06:06:34 EDT 2000


This reminds me of a scene in a twentieth-century Japanese novel (I
apologize but author and title elude me for the moment). The
story of Wonhyo's drinking from a human skull is re-told, BUT he is
referred to as a T'ang Chinese monk.

My question is whether the same holds true for studies of this painting.
IOW, are Wonhyo and Uisang known in Japan as (Shilla) Korean or (T'ang) 
Chinese monks?

John Frankl


On Mon, 19 Jun 2000, Yong-ho Choe wrote:

> Dear colleagues:
>    I would like to draw attention to a painting I recently discovered.  A monthly calendar of Japan Airlines that I have features for the month of June a painting that depicts an aspect of life of Uisang, a great Silla monk.  The title of the painting is (I give Korean reading of the Japanese Hanmun title) "HwaOmjong chosa hoejOn" (Pictorial tale of the progenitor of the HwaOm sect).  It is in 27 rolls, depicting "the life of Silla's eminent monks, Uisang and WOnhyo," according to its explanation.  A work of the Kamakura period (12th century), the painting is designated as a national treasurer of Japan and is being preserved at Kosanji in Kyoto.  
>    Is this painting well known?  Would Buddhist and art scholars be interested in pursuing this?  Although both Uisang and WOnhyo were prominent figures in Asian Buddhism, I was surprised to learn that their life stories were depicted in painting in Japan, going far back to the 12th century.  I thought some scholars might be interested in this.  
>    Cheer.
> Yong-ho Choe, Professor
> Department of History
> University of Hawaii at Manoa
> Honolulu, HI  96822
> 
> Tel: 808 956-6762
> Fax: 808 956-9600
> E-mail: choeyh at hawaii.edu
> 



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