Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara of the Lion’s Roar

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The wood stone carved statue of the Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara sitting upon a lion has gone through many depictions when passed down from India to China. One possible depiction can be representing the lack of identity for a woman while the opponent power, a male influence, restricts that. The sculpted art was created in the late fourteenth to fifteenth century exemplifying an exterior beauty supported by his high cheekbones and a rounded chin below the blushed red perked lips to shape a feminine beauty of the typical Chinese woman. Grounding the bodhisattva’s body to sit atop the lion was the masculine chest followed by the clenched bulky feet. This can demonstrate the suppressing of the woman’s abstract mind to the male’s physicality to be presented in a society as something further depreciated. Nevertheless, it is showing that the body of the bodhisattva to have an unstable gender identity. Observing male-female conflict, the lion sitting on the bottom is shown with a braid-like symbol on its neck that controls the way it can turn its head, such as a dog wears a leash to be in the boundaries of its owner. This is probably to neglect the sight of female intelligence being able to move forward as the mechanics of a human body does.

Furthermore, the position of the legs has one on the lion and the other leg that rests on the pedestal. This can mean one leg being forced to stay in this type of conformity while the other wants to walk towards something that enables it some type of freedom. In fact, “…, the raised right and pendant lower leg are often found in representations of the Bodhisattva Alalokiteshvara, who takes the well-known Water Moon form, in China the most popular manifestation of this bo...

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...der is that its varying messages from the sculpture have puzzled its viewers as to what its meaning can be. “For the myths tell us that from the mystical perspective the distinctions between male and female…-as between time and eternity, pluralism, and monism- are meaningless”(TECHNIQUES OF THE WORLD SAVIORS: Bodhisattva Avalokitesvara, part two from The Myth of the Great Secret: An Appreciation of Joseph Campbell [Celestial Arts, 1990], Toby Johnson). Although both influences of a male and female have crossed together, the mythical stories of the goddess or god have represented the need for a stronger female aspect. To hold it as high of a position as a goddess can have and make its display for the entire world to see, this piece of evidence not only tells the tale of the Chinese woman’s adversity, but of the adversity of women everywhere.

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