Guardian Protector of the East (Dongfang chiguo tianwang)

China

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 207

Guardians, particularly the four associated with the cardinal directions, play an important role in Buddhism and are most frequently shown within larger groupings of divinities. Here, the Guardian Protector of the East sits upon a demon symbolic of the obstacles that must be overcome to attain enlightenment, such as egoism and greed. In most Chinese imagery, the Guardian of the East brandishes a sword, but he is shown with a bow and arrow in the southwest province of Yunnan, which from the tenth to the thirteenth century was under the control of the independent Dali kingdom. The inclusion of arsenic in the copper alloy used to cast this sculpture is also typical of Yunnan.

Guardian Protector of the East (Dongfang chiguo tianwang), Partially gilt arsenical bronze; lost-wax cast, China

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