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Shintou bijutsu@_“Ή”όp
KEY WORD :@art history / general terms
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Shinto art. The art used in the worship of Shinto deities *kami _. The term does not include architecture, but does include painting, sculpture and craft objects. There is a wide range of Shinto art: ritual utensils, saigu Υ‹ο or saiki ΥŠν, shrine treasures *shinpou _•σ, other shrine possessions including mirrors *mishoutai Œδ³‘Μ or *kakebotoke Œœ•§, ornaments and banners, festival carts and palanquins *mikoshi Œδ—`. The term covers much painting, including pilgrimage paintings *sankei mandara ŽQŒw™ΦδΆ—…, scroll paintings of the origin of a shrine engi emaki ‰‹NŠGŠͺ, festival hanging scrolls and screens *sairei-zu Υ—η}, devotional hanging scrolls, and maps e-zu ŠG}. There is also a great deal of sculpture, including images of Shinto deities *shinzou _‘œ and of their Buddhist identities *honjibutsu –{’n•§; and miscellaneous items such as relic containers *sharitou ŽΙ—˜“ƒ and votive plaques *ema ŠG”n. Most of these categories of items are not limited to Shinto pieces and stylistically are studied along with comparable secular or Buddhist art. For example, an engi emaki is stylistically related to other picture scrolls *emaki ŠGŠͺ of the same period more closely than to other Shinto art, even if its content elucidates the history of a shrine. Also, a sculpture of the Buddhist equivalent of a kami cannot be distinguished from a Buddhist image unless it has an inscription or it is known that the image was used in the worship of a kami. In contrast, a sculpture of the Shinto form of a kami may not use the artistic conventions associated with Buddhist sculpture. It is believed that in early times the Japanese worshipped natural objects such as rocks, trees and waterfalls, without using buildings or images, and that the making and use of images in worship derived from Buddhism. Extant sculptures of kami, both in their form as kami and as Buddhas, date from the late 8c and 9c. The first instance of making an image is believed to be that recorded in TADO JINGUUJI GARAN ENGI SHIZAICHOU ‘½“x_‹{Ž›‰Ύ—•‰‹NŽ‘ΰ’  (Record of Properties of the Associated Temple of Tado Shrine), compiled in 801, which relates the story of the priest Mangan's –žŠθ conversion of the kami of Tado to Buddhism in 763 and his subsequent portrayal of the kami in a sculpture. Thus, this artistic development appears to have occurred well after the introduction of Buddhism in the mid 6c. Extant paintings are much more recent than sculptures, dating from the Kamakura period. although there are records of paintings of kami from earlier times which have not survived. The earliest records of devotional paintings of the landscape of shrines *miya mandara ‹{™ΦδΆ—… appear in the third quarter of the 12c and fine paintings associated with shrine cults, particularly *Kasuga mandara t“ϊ™ΦδΆ—…, *Sannou mandara ŽR‰€™ΦδΆ—… and *Kumano mandara ŒF–μ™ΦδΆ—… survive from the Kamakura period and later. Paintings of these and other shrine cults were used in the shrines' associated temples as symbols of the protection of the kami as well as by devotees and confraternities of devotees kou u. The history of the shrines was recorded in scrolls, just like the history of Buddhist temples. The illustrated scrolls of the Kasuga Gongen Miracles, Kasuga Gongen genki-e t“ϊŒ Œ»Œ±‹LŠG (1309, Imperial Collection), is a particularly long and lavish example of this type of painting. From the 12c it becomes clear that shrines were seen as paradises, both in their own right and as Buddhist paradises or gates to Buddhist paradises. Red, white and green corridors and gates, like the Chinese palaces seen in Buddhist paintings, were added to a number of shrines, such as lwashimizu Hachimanguu Ξ΄…”ͺ”¦‹{ and Kasuga Taisha t“ϊ‘εŽΠ. This idea lies behind the production of shrine paradise paintings such as the Kasuga joudo mandara t“ϊς“y™ΦδΆ—…. Paintings of the welcome of the deceased (see *raigou-zu —ˆŒ}}) particularly by *Amida ˆ’–ν‘Ι or *Jizou ’n‘  also may be set in the landscape of particular shrines. Of particular importance in the history of Shinto art is the separation of Shinto and Buddhism, shinbutsu bunri _•§•ͺ—£ that occurred in 1868. All Shinto shrines were required to present their history to the government and remove Buddhist images and paraphernalia. Establishments which were thoroughly mixed had to choose whether they were Shinto or Buddhist. Sites dedicated to the ascetic practices of shugendou CŒ±“Ή sites were badly damaged. Even shrines that today are quite purely Shinto once were accompanied by Buddhist temples, and purely Buddhist temples by Shinto shrines. Destruction of Buddhism in general accompanied the separation, and buildings, art and documents were destroyed. Shrine and temple buildings were also moved. In the destruction and confusion much Shinto art was destroyed or moved. Shinbutsu bunri and the rise of nationalism in the first half of the 20c have made the understanding of this art particularly difficult.
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REFERENCES:
*honji suijaku –{’n‚瑁@
EXTERNAL LINKS: 
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