Asian Art at the Museum

in #hive-1340223 days ago

Hello friends and fellow Hivians. I'm back to bring you more from the Joslyn Museum in Omaha, Nebraska. This time, a lot of neat things I saw from Asian art. Without further ado, let me bring some of them to you.

Grand Vase Circa 1796 -1820

I will start out with a few Chinese pieces. This vase is beautifully crafted, right? A sure porcelain delight to the eyes. At first glance, the first thing that came to mind was not to break it, haha. I guess that is me seeing too many movies where some idiot is toying around with one not realizing how expensive they are.

Altar Set Circa 18th-19th Century

Chinese altar sets are used for worship, honoring ancestors, and performing rituals. They are found in homes, temples, and ancestral halls. These were constructed using cloisonne enamel on bronze and copper.

Bell Circa Zhou Period (1100-256 CE)

This Chinese bell is much different than those in Western cultures. It is hit with a wooden mallet, unlike Western ones, which are swung. Depending on where it is struct, it can make two different noises. They are often decorated with nine (3 rows of 3) raised bumps called mei.

Pair of Female Dancers, Funerary Urn and Tomb Figure of Court Lady

All these Chinese pieces are from the Tang Dynasty (618-907). The pottery art of this period was referred to as sancai. Three colors (amber, green, white) of glazes were applied to earthenware before firing. It was originally used just for funerary items, but artists began to apply it to everyday objects later on.

Fu Guarden Dog Circa 18th Century

Also known as Stone Guardian Lions, they are among the most recognizable in Chinese art. They descend from Buddist imagery from back in the Han Dynasty (206 BCE - 220 CE). There were a pair of them on display facing each other.

Ganesha East Indian, Mount Abu Region

This piece is from the 18th century period and is carved out of alabaster. A Hindu God known as the god of beginnings, wisdom, and luck, and is known for removing obstacles. I need to get aquintated with him, haha. Does anyone else feel this way?

Carved Strut From a Temple Car, East Indian Tamil Nadu

This 19th century piece is made of polychromed wood. Just a small part of what would have been a good-sized temple car. Temple cars or Temple chariots carry representations of Hindu deities around the streets of the temple on festival days. These temple cars are huge and can weigh over 200 tons.

Bodhisattva, Tibetan Circa 1736-95

This piece is made of gilt bronze. A Bodhisattva is a being who is on the path to enlightenment and becoming a Buddha. They are compassionate and work to free others from suffering. They will stop their enlightenment to help others and it's said they perfect themselves over many lifetimes.

Phurpa (Tantric Ritual Dagger), Tibetan Circa 19th Century

Made of enabled bronze this ritual dagger is well decorated with many meanings relative to Buddism. The three sided triangular blade stake knife is something to see.

Buddha and Mucalinda, The Seven-Headed Serpant, Cambodia or Thailand, Circa 8th-9th Century

Mucalinda is the king of serphants in Buddhism who protected the Buddha from a flood. After the storm, Mucalinda transformed into a young man and bowed to the Buddha. Intially, I thought a seven-headed serpant would be an evil figure, hehe.

Kamakura Guardian Figure, Japan, Kamakura Period (1185-1333)

Buddusm was introduced in Japan in the 6th century. Over time beliefs were mixed with another religion, Shinto. So Buddist workshipped Raijin, the Shinto god of thunder, depicted here. They saw him as a protector of temples for both religions.

Vase, Japan Meiji Period (1868-1912)

Both of these vases are made from gilded porcelain with red iron. Tall and skinny, but don't they just compliment each other? I think they do and I like the colors.

There was quite a bit more of pottery and other Buddha figurines. It was a pretty cool filled hallaway of Asian artifacts and I hope you enjoyed what I shared.

This is all I have for you this time. Have you been to a museum lately? If so, post about it right here in the Museum Community.

Take care, stay safe and have a good week ahead. Until next time!

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We also have those female dancers around the house, but I'm not sure if they are dancers, they look like these figures. 😁

That's cool 😎 that there are some art figurines around the place you stay at. Are they older pieces like these?

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I think they are old. But yours is older maybe. My boss likes to keep those things that she collected back then😌.

I can defintely see why she has them some may have sentimental values.

It's impressive, also Asian art there in Omaha, interesting. And from different areas and cultures, Tibetan, Hindi, Chinese... the sculpture of the dog looks like an angry little lion too. And ceramic statues and other decorative items are very beautiful. It seems that the museum is really huge with so many pieces to show. Happy week amigo!
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I can understand why a lot of Chinese art would be around. The Chinese were a big part building the Transcontinental railroad that started here in the late 19th century. Quite a few of those pieces were donated and not bought by the museum.

It really is a large sized museum and there is still a lot of room to add more. The best part is thier is a lot of staff to answer questions. They do that well along with being the art police, jaja. Take care Amiga 😃

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Ah sure, it's true there were Chinese workers there, I watched them on movies 😉 Take care too amigo!
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Fascinating museum art pieces. Thank you for sharing your visit with us. It's been a long while since I visited a museum. Happy week ahead!


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Wonderful collections of ancient arts and artifacts!

Thank you friend. Only one possibility of an item from your Thailand.

It looks more like Cambodian sculpture to me. The water serpent or snake, with three, five to seven heads are supposed to be guardians in our culture. But there could be some naughty water snakes around in the past. Two tribes of water snakes use to wage war over territory. So, villagers had to ask the Buddha to stop the feuding. They were each assigned new territories and they stopped the quarrels!

Interesting thanks for the additional information.

Such cool stuff! Great pictures by the way. It's nice to see the items well protected. I'm sure they're worth a fortune!

Thanks. Yes I'm sure some were worth a pretty penny and not for handling, hehe.

Cool this visit... the dog ‘Fu’ is angry. Lol. Bodhisattva is holding a mudra position in his hands. It is the Dhyana or Emptiness Mudra: it helps to purify our mind, it calms our thoughts giving rise to fill us with new energies.
I think doing this will serve you better than owning a Ganesha figure. 😜

Haha thanks Amiga. I've down on my luck I could afford some peanuts 🥜 and Ganesha could rub off on me 🤣 Afterwards I see the Bodhisattva.

I found your post via the @aliveandthriving curation. I especially like the Kamakura era thunder god! Japanese syncretism is interesting - there's even a name for it in Japanese: "Shinbutsu-shūgō" (神仏習合) = "Shinto-Buddhist Syncretism." Those who disapprove of it call it "Shinbutsu-konkō" (神仏混淆) = "Shinto-Buddhist Confusion"!
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Yes very interesting indeed and thanks for the added information and stopping by. Take care 😃

I really wonder why they didn't have one from Indonesia. It's as old as these pieces. that pottery from Japan especially Meiji is really cool to me. Thanks for reminding me about this community, I love museums and often my priority when visiting a new place. Let me subscribe to this 😄 so next time I know where to look for when I wanted to share something about it.

Yes most items were Chinese. I would have liked to see some more items from other countries including Indonesia. There was a display of some more Buddhas that were Nepalese (below).