Portrait of Abbot Sengan
Place of OriginJapan
PeriodEdo period (1615-1868)
CultureJapanese
MaterialsInk and colors on silk
DimensionsH.87 3/4 in x W. 31 in, H. 222.2 cm x W. 78.7 cm (overall)
Credit LineBequest of Irma B. Scheier
Object number1991.129
DepartmentJapanese Art
ClassificationsPainting
On View
Not on viewThis portrait depicts Sengan, the 326th abbot of the Zen temple Myoshinji. Called chinzo, such portraits of Zen masters were first painted in the 1300s.
Unlike other Buddhist paintings, which idealize buddhas and bodhisattvas to suggest their transcendent nature, portraits of Zen masters depict them as ordinary human beings though they were thought to possess extraordinary spiritual powers. In this chinzo the priest Sengan is shown as an old man with wrinkles and hollowed cheeks, and with an expression thought to convey religious conviction.
Subject
- priest
- Buddhism
- portrait
1850-1900
approx. 1880-1900
approx. 1550-1644
approx. 1593-1650
ca. 1331