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| ginbutsu 銀仏 | ||||||
| KEY WORD : art history / scluptures | ||||||
|  Silver 
	  Buddha. Bronze was the most frequent metal used in the production of Buddhist 
	  statues. Where silver was used instead of bronze, the figure is called ginbutsu.	  According to available documents, silver statues were produced in Japan 
	  in the Nara and Heian periods, but surviving examples are very rare. Because 
	  of the high price of silver, relatively few pieces were produced, and the 
	  statues themselves tend to be small in size. Famous extant examples include 
	  a figure (height 23.6cm ) attached to the coronet of *Fukuukenjaku 
	  Kannon 不空羂索観音 in Toudaiji *Hokkedou 東大寺法華堂, Nara, and thought to 
	  date from the 8c. An Amida Nyoraizou 阿弥陀如来像 (7.6cm high) in Jougon-in 浄厳院, Shiga 
	  preference, is believed to have been made in the Kamakura period. In 1937 
	  the right hand of a Buddha cast in silver, approximately life-size, was 
	  discovered under a pedestal in Koufukuji 興福寺, Nara, where, according to 
	  records, there once were two silver Buddhas. | 
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| REFERENCES: | ||||||
| *chuukin 鋳金 | ||||||
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| NOTES: | ||||||
(C)2001 Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. No reproduction or republication without written permission. 掲載のテキスト・写真・イラストなど、全てのコンテンツの無断複製・転載を禁じます。  | 
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