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| kakebotoke 懸仏 | ||||||
| KEY WORD : art history / iconography | ||||||
|  A round 
      metal or wooden plate with a separately made or repousse (hammered from 
      the rear) image of a  Shinto deity *kami 神, or Buddhist deity *honjibutsu 本地仏 (Buddhist counterpart of a kami) imposed upon it. The term also 
      refers to the similarly adorned large mirrors hung in Buddhist temples and 
      Shinto shrines . These mirrors may represent the actual forms of images 
      regarded as secret himitsu 秘密. Most kakebotoke are 30 - 
      50 cm in diameter, although they may be as large as 1m or as small as 10cm. 
      During the Kamakura period the figures in relief on the surface of the plaques 
      became more fully 3D, but by the Nanbukuchou period although some kakebotoke have rounded figures there was a gradual movement towards lower relief and 
      less attention to the modelling of the figures. In the Muromachi period 
      the figures had become simple but the decoration was elaborate (see *Shintou 
      bijutsu 神道美術). In handscroll paintings *emaki 絵巻 of the Kamakura and Motomachi periods kakebotoke are sometimes 
      seen hanging outside the curtains of Shinto sanctuaries *honden 本殿.  | 
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(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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