Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/11146
Title: Portraiture in the Buddhist Image House
Authors: de Zoysa, A.
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: Faculty of Graduate Studies, University of Kelaniya
Citation: De Zoysa, Asoka 2015. Portraiture in the Buddhist Image House, p. 93, In: Proceedings of the International Postgraduate Research Conference 2015 University of Kelaniya, Kelaniya, Sri Lanka, (Abstract), 339 pp.
Abstract: Stone Inscriptions (SelLipi and Tam Lipi) and donor inscriptions by kings(Sannasa)and ministers (Tudapath) on copper and palm leaf show an unbroken tradition from the early years of Buddhism in Sri Lanka how the upper strata of the Radala(Royalty)were responsible for the erection and maintenance of temples and monasteries up to the 19th century.These records have been useful to identify some of the figures of laymen on the walls of the Image House as donors of that particular temple. They usually stand closest to the entrance of the sanctum and sometimes are shown carrying offerings to the Buddha or worshipping him, adjacent to the main image. The tradition of depicting monks who nurtured a certain tradition of Teacher- Pupil-Tradition (ŚiśyaśiśyānuParamparawa)or mentored the building of a particular Image House can be traced back to the mid 18th century in the Kandyan Region (Udarata)Individualized figures are seldom in the Kandyan School of Art (UdarataSampradāya). As such, a convincing identification of a statue or painting is impossible. Nevertheless, regarding the identification of the figures of Duttagāmini at the AnuradhapraRuvanveliseya and of Parakramabāhu I at the PolonnaruwaPothgulVehera, no questions are raised today, although we do not have any epigraphical evidence for identification. Similarly the figure of King KīrtiSrīRājsamha in cave no 2 of Dambulla seem to be undisputed sans evidence in situ. A similar statue in the pose of worshiping is seen in cave no 3 is left without identification. With the help of external information regarding the administration of the area and the mentor of the temple, two figures have been identified in the Medawela Raja MahāVihāraya as DunivlaNilame and the image in the DambadeniyaRaja MahāVihāraya, too has been identified as MēgastenneAdigar. In the Dankirigala Len Viharaya cave temple the local tradition is cherished that the LewkeDisāwa is shown on the wall facing the Buddha Statue. As no inscriptions are available for identification, in these early royal figures, the naming the images is disputed.It is however intriguing that the figure of a King appears in mans if theseKandyan temples such as Danture, Debaragala, and many TampitaViharas and the even Temple of the Tooth.As the King KīrtiSrīRājsamha is not recorded to have supported these temples through a donor inscription, the figures have not been regarded as the initiator of the Revival Movement.The first question that arises, is if these identifiable figure due to a fixed iconography, can be regarded as ―Portraits‖.Shifting to the 20th century, at the ThimbirigasyāyaIsipathanārāmayaportraits of the members of the Family of Pedris are shown, which strictly follow the rules of portraiture practiced by British painters. Although the paintings of the Image House haven been attributed to Sarlis, these somber full seize portraits facing the sanctum juxtapose the Sri Lankan mural art of the 20th century and portraiture introduced by the British.The scene of laying of the foundation to KelaniyaRajamhāviharayaby Helena Wijewardana and members of her family, is an interesting mixture of two styles. Although the body of the Buddhist monks and laymen are not individualized in this scene, SoliasMendis superimposes faces that seem to have carefully copied photographs of donors and mentors. The murals of the MeddepolaRajamahāviharaya which are dated to the first decade of the 20th century, some mentors too seem to have portrait like features.A trend can be carefully observed in the 19th and 20th century. The tradition of painting the face as a portrait of a deceased chief monk to adorn the entrance to his funeral pyre in the south also testifies for a tradition that evolves out from a further development from photograph to monochrome painting. The over 100 temples documented in the Samkathana Project on documenting evidences of Discourse Communities have revealed many individualized images of donors and mentors which can be regarded as portraits.The paper argues that portraiture was not solely introduced to Sri Lanka by the British Academic artists, but may have had a tradition that can be traced to themid18thcentury.
URI: http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/11146
Appears in Collections:IPRC - 2015

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