Escaping from Confinement: Hell Imagery in the Shōjuraigōji Rokudō-e Scrolls
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Constructing and Escaping the Hell within the Literary Source
3. Hell Imagery: Representing Confinement and Torture in Pictorial Traditions
3.1. Precedents: Incompletely Defined Hell Space in the Scrolls of Hells
3.2. The Shōjuraigōji Scrolls: Prominent Representation of Gates and Walls
3.3. “The Boiling Cauldron” at the Landscape and Architectural Scales
3.4. Exotic Gates of “the Sealed Cages”
3.5. Section Summary
4. Escape from the Hell through the Broken Cauldron and the Opened Gate
4.1. Freedom Unfolding: Mental Travel in the Kitano Scroll
4.2. Two Episodes of Hell-Escaping in the Shōjuraigōji Scrolls
4.2.1. The Sutra of Precepts Scroll: Lotus-Birth from a Broken Cauldron
4.2.2. The Sutra of Parables Scroll: The Hell’s Gate as a Metonym
4.3. The Hanging Scroll Format: Representation of Vertically Layered Realms
4.4. Section Summary
5. Ritual Space: Turning the Wheel of the Six Realms
5.1. Question about Spatial Arrangements Reframed
5.2. Centrality of the Enma Scroll
5.3. A Potential Arrangement of the Scrolls in a Ritual Space
5.4. Potential Ritual Functions of Hell Imagery and Rokudo-e
5.5. Section Summary
6. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | For example, the Matsuda scroll is based on mezu rasetsu butsumyo kyo 馬頭羅刹仏名経, an apocryphal sutra and forgery Buddhist sutra compiled during the Tang dynasty (618–907 CE). It seems that this sutra is also titled foshuo foming jing 佛説佛名經 T14.0441. |
2 | Fukui Rikichirō, the proponent of this idea, suggests that the Go-Shirakawa scroll is part of an entire set of six-realms paintings. His argument had been generally accepted until recently when the complexity in hell presentations was considered. For instance, considering the early Scrolls of Hells are based on different textual sources and are virtually distinct from the hell images in rokudō-e, Chusid suggests that, besides rokudō-e, there should be other genres such as the independent hell depiction, and the representation of the three evil realms of hell, hungry ghosts, and animals (Chusid 2016, pp. 18–19). |
3 | It seems that this scroll is designated for monastic viewers, as all the sinners have shaved heads, indicating them being Buddhist monks and nuns in their previous lives, and the inscription speaks about sinners who are monks but have broken the precepts of not drinking alcohol and not eating meat and therefore enter the hell. |
4 | The unrepresented hells are “the Hell of Wailing” (Kyōkan jigoku 叫喚地獄), “the Hell of Great Wailing” (Daikyōkan jigoku 大叫喚地獄), “the Hell of Scorching Heat” (Shōnetsu jigoku 焦熱地獄), and “the Hell of Great Scorching Heat” (Daishōnetsu jigoku焦熱地獄). For example, the Kitano scroll includes all eight hells, even though each is more abbreviated as one scene. |
5 | The Essentials mentions that this hell has seven circles of walls in total. |
6 | Only five realms are depicted, except for the realm of asuras. If it is not an error in the painting, perhaps there is a possibility of indicating that the asura realm is somehow special here like the kingdom of the wrathful king. It is interesting that here the king is mentioned to be in the remote realm, which is presumably a destiny driven by an evil karma as the remoteness displayed in the hell gates. |
7 | An uncertainty in my proposal pertains to the order of placing the realm of asuras above (or after, in viewing sequence) the human realm rather than below. The Chinese tradition typically follows this order, while the Japanese tradition often places the realm of asuras below (or before, in viewing sequence) the human realm. The ambiguity in the Shojuraigoji set arises because the only depiction of these realms together is in the narrative scrolls, where the realm of asuras is omitted, making it challenging to determine its relationship with the human realm. |
8 | Infiltration refers to the understanding that a devotee is still within the world of transmigration although their pain would be alleviated by Kannon 觀音 (Skt: Avalokiteśvara) and Jizo Bodhisattvas. Transcendence means escaping the six realms through the notion of a transcendental locality such as the Western Pure Land. Copenetration is a combination of the former two modes that developed within the Tendai school. Based on the expansion of the six realms into the ten worlds (jikkai 十界), to which four nirvanic levels are added above, this mode implies total interpenetration with the concept of “each world is equipped within its own ten worlds”. Lastly, ludization conveys the radical relativizing of the six realms and the conception of them as an arena of play. |
9 | The images depict the tales of falling into the pond of hell and the salvation from hell. |
10 | It should be noted that although Ryōzen’in is conventionally considered to be the original context for the scrolls, because of the first repair documentation, Yamamoto and Crusid reconsider this possibility. Crusid convincingly argues that it might not be so because Ryōzen’in was not recorded to have any association with the Essentials; also, it is instructional of Genshin. She offers an alternative possibility of Shuryōgon’in Cloister 首楞厳院, where Genshin composed the Essentials and it is probably where the Shōjuraigōji scrolls were originally designed for. |
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Zhou, Z. Escaping from Confinement: Hell Imagery in the Shōjuraigōji Rokudō-e Scrolls. Arts 2024, 13, 94. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13030094
Zhou Z. Escaping from Confinement: Hell Imagery in the Shōjuraigōji Rokudō-e Scrolls. Arts. 2024; 13(3):94. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13030094
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhou, Zhenru. 2024. "Escaping from Confinement: Hell Imagery in the Shōjuraigōji Rokudō-e Scrolls" Arts 13, no. 3: 94. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13030094
APA StyleZhou, Z. (2024). Escaping from Confinement: Hell Imagery in the Shōjuraigōji Rokudō-e Scrolls. Arts, 13(3), 94. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13030094