The full title of this lecture is 'The Many Lives of a Buddhist Devotional Print: A Dated Dunhuang Document in the Royal Ontario Museum Collection’. This lecture was part of the Georgetown – IDP Lecture Series: Following the Silk Roads to North America, which was generously supported by the Henry Luce Foundation. It was streamed live on 4 August 2021.
In 1927 the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) in Toronto, Canada, acquired a single printed sheet from the Dunhuang cave library in what is now Gansu province, China. A votive print of the Buddhist deity Avalokiteśvara commissioned in 947 CE by the ruler of Dunhuang, the ROM print remains the only Dunhuang document in a Canadian public institution and serves as an important material artefact of the types of Buddhist patronage and practice that flourished along the old Silk Roads. Nearly a century later, scholars have identified more than thirty whole, partial, and compound paper artefacts related to the ROM Dunhuang print scattered in museums, libraries, and private collections around the world. Dr Amanda Goodman's talk examines this unique set of Buddhist commemorative objects, and explores how modern research and scientific analysis can shed light on the history of these thousand-year-old prints.
Ещё видео!