Tuesday, December 17, 2019

A meizanologist's diary (35)

10 November: a reverent hush pervades the exhibition hall, crowded though it is. This is not a mountain day. We’re at the Nara National Museum, paying our annual homage to the treasures of the Shōsō-in, a time capsule sent down from the eighth-century Imperial court. This year’s iteration includes some of the collection’s finest pieces, to mark the first year of the new Reiwa era.


Among the bronze mirrors and the exquisitely inlaid casks, Item 20 looks oddly out of place. It is a battered relic of weathered wooden layers that looks for all the world like a stand for some upmarket bonsai tree. “Remaining part of a mountain-shaped object,” the catalogue tells us. Straining our eyes through the gloom, we descry a miniature grove of blackened and crinkled trees – wrought of silver says the catalogue, complete with cloth scraps for leaves.


Many of the Shōsō-in’s treasures recall a known person, and even a specific occasion. The golden pendants we’ve just seen, for example, once adorned the crowns worn by Emperor Shōmu and Empress Kōmyō on that very spring day in Tempyō Shōhō 4 (752) when the Great Buddha of the Tōdaiji was inaugurated.

The eye-opening ceremony for the Great Buddha of the Todaiji
Painting by Hirayama Ikuo
The mountain-shaped object is different. Nobody knows how it came to be in the Shōsō-in, or why. As good scholars should be, the catalogue authors are circumspect: “While it is not known how this was used, it probably served as a decorative object during a Buddhist ritual or some other kind of ceremony.”


Casting a last glance at the enigmatic mountain, we move on to an eight-lobed table and a set of gilt bronze windbells. These objects breathe the elegance and refinement of the High Tempyō. But I’m thinking that, somewhere in the Emperor’s entourage, amid this world of symmetry and grace, there was somebody for whom the wild, uncouth form of mountains had a special meaning.

2 comments:

Edward J. Taylor said...

Nice that you parsed that out. I'd looked forward to visiting for years, partly because I'd never been, but mainly because I was looking forward to seeing items from the Silk Road, over which I've been incrementally traveling over that past few years.

Sadly I picked the wrong year, for as you too saw, the relics were all Japanese. Little surprise I suppose, in this first year of Reiwa.

Project Hyakumeizan said...

Ted, thanks again for reading. Yes, exactly, one attraction of the exhibition is that it takes a snapshot of the Silk Road at one moment of time. You raise an interesting point about this year's exhibition, that it might have leaned in the direction of purely "made in Japan" artefacts. But, then again, I wonder if that matters, given that artisans came to Japan from the continent, and local artisans were imitating T'ang originals, and using techniques learned from the continent etc etc ...

Coming back to the model mountain, I wonder if that has Chinese cousins? The catalogue specifies that it has few analogues, but doesn't say whether that is only in Japan or in China too ...