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These rare Buddhist artworks were found to contain traces of bone and blood
The Freer Buddha undergoes a CT scan at the National
Museum of Natural History. “He wouldn’t relax his legs,” Donna Strahan
recalls with a laugh.
(Freer|Sackler Staff)
The three seated figures stare contemplatively outward, their legs
folded and their torsos swathed in simple one-shoulder robes. Once
resplendent in gold leaf-plated skin, the statues have degraded over the
centuries, the eye-popping color of their bodies and dress giving way
to earthy browns and blacks, the craftsmanship underlying them laid bare
at the expense of their shine. All three works depict the Buddha, all
three were sculpted more than 1,300 years ago in China, and all three
feature layers of lacquer made from the sap of a single species of tree.
They are the only known Buddhas of their time period to evince this
technique.
This intriguing trio of statues is the subject of the exhibition “Secrets of the Lacquer Buddha,”
which debuted at the Smithsonian’s Sackler Gallery on December 9 and
which will remain on view through June 10. The three featured Buddhas
hail from the collections of the Freer Gallery (together, the Freer and Sackler Galleries make up the Smithsonian’s Asian art museums), the Walters Art Museum (in Baltimore) and the Metropolitan Museum of Art (in New York City), respectively.
The Walters Buddha, the oldest of the three, dates to the twilight
of the Sui Dynasty—the end of the sixth century AD. The other two were
created in the days of the young Tang Dynasty, in the early seventh
century. An incomplete fourth specimen, a Bodhisattva
head from the Sackler collection dating to the eighth century, was also
studied as a point of reference. All of these specimens were brought
together for comparative analysis and exhibition thanks to the vision of
Freer|Sackler conservator Donna Strahan, who had prior experience working with both the Met and Walters Buddhas.
The Walters Buddha (above, detail) is the oldest of the
three statues, dating to the end of the sixth century. It is an example
of the wood-core technique, wherein layers of lacquer paste were applied
to a solid wooden mold.
(The Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, Maryland, 25.9)
Strahan had gotten the chance to do some laboratory work on those
two sculptures before coming to the Smithsonian, and a preliminary
discovery she made demanded follow-up research. “I had found that there
is this partially burnt, ground-up bone in both Buddhas,” she said,
mixed in with the lacquer to give it more texture. “When I mentioned
that I thought it would be worth looking at the Freer Buddha” to see if
it, too, contained bone, she says, the director of the Freer|Sackler Julian Raby said: “That sounds like an exhibition.’”
In order to put the show together, Strahan had to negotiate the
relocation of the Met and Walters Buddhas to Washington, D.C.; owing to a
provision in the Freer Gallery’s founding charter, the Freer Buddha may
not be moved from its present home. “The Met and Walters Buddhas had
never traveled,” she says, “and they’d been in their museums almost a
hundred years,” so securing their release was a tricky business. “But
since I’m a conservator and have examined these pieces and know them
quite well, I felt quite confident that we could take care of them.”
The Freer sculpture (detail) is one of the oldest known
examples of a hollow-core lacquer Buddha, in which clay was used as the
underlying mold instead of wood, and was removed once the artwork was
complete, leaving the interior hollow.
(Purchase—Charles Lang Freer Endowment, Freer Gallery of Art F1944.46)
Once a deal was struck and the Buddhas were gathered at the
Freer|Sackler, intensive scientific analysis got underway. The first
step was subjecting the specimens to x-radiography, a completely
noninvasive means of drawing conclusions about their inner structure.
X-ray scans revealed the presence of iron wire in the Buddhas’ ears, and
of recesses in the backs of their heads that would once have
accommodated halo attachments. X-rays also indicated concentrations of
phosphorus and calcium—the makings of bone—in the layered lacquer paste
coating the cores of the sculptures. Just like the Met and Walters
Buddhas, the Freer Buddha incorporated animal bone as a thickening
agent. Strahan’s hunch was correct.
Additional analysis entailed microscope inspection of minute
samples taken from each of the three Buddhas. Scientists found that the
same type of fabric—hemp—was used to separate the lacquer layers in all
three cases. A cutting-edge gas chromatography technique developed at
the Getty Conservation Institute shed additional light. “That gave us a
lot more information,” Strahan recalls. “It wasn’t just the lacquer
tree resin that was mixed in—there were also oils and sawdust. And we
actually found human blood in our Bodhisattva head.”
The Met Buddha (detail) is the best-preserved of the three,
and is another early example of the hollow-core technique. Still visible
on its exterior are traces of gold leaf and once-dazzling green and red
paint.
(The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Rogers Fund, 1919 (19.186))
The presence of blood in the eighth-century Bodhisattva specimen,
not detected (as yet) in the three more complete, older Buddhas, raised
many fresh questions for the research team. “We’re still investigating,”
Strahan says. “We’re going to try and figure out: Was this just one
layer? Was this just in one sculpture? Or is it a common addition?”
While she acknowledges that the precise function of the
blood—ritual or practical—as well as its source will likely never be
known, Strahan is optimistic that follow-up research might give her and
others in the field a better sense of how widespread this technique was.
She is also hopeful that ongoing assessments of the proteins found in
the Met and Walters Buddhas could yet turn up additional insights into
the bone and its role.
The story of the continuing research into the lives of these
lacquer Buddhas is told in rich detail in the new exhibition, and the
three main specimens—as well as a 3D-printed facsimile of the
Bodhisattva head—are all on view for patrons to consider and compare.
What excites Strahan most about this show is the potential to
engage both the scientific and artistic facets of viewers’ brains.
“Science can really help us learn a lot more about art objects,” she
says. “I hope by looking at materials instead of just the style, we can
get people interested in how science helps us understand art.” “Secrets of the Lacquer Buddha” is on view at the Sackler Gallery through June 10, 2018.
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