Chinese Buddhist wooden sculptures of Water-moon Guanyin, a Bodhisattva
sitting in a leisurely reclining pose on a rocky throne, are housed in
Western collections and are thus removed from their original context(s).
Not only are most of them of unknown origin, but also lack a precise
date. Tracing their sources is difficult because of the scant
information provided by art dealers in previous periods. Thus, only
preliminary investigations into their stylistic development and
technical features have been made so far. Moreover, until recently none
of the Chinese temples that provided their original context, i.e. their
precise position within those temple compounds and their respective
place in the Buddhist pantheon, have been examined at all.In her study,
Petra H. Rösch investigates these very aspects, including questions
about the religious position and function of the sculptures of this
special Bodhisattva. She also looks at the technical construction, the
collecting of Chinese Buddhist sculptures in general and those made of
wood in particular.She uses a combination of stylistic, iconographical,
buddhological, as well as technical methodologies in her investigation
of the Water-moon Guanyin images and sheds light on the Buddhist temples
in Shanxi Province, the works of art they once housed, and the religious
practices of the eleventh to thirteenth centuries connected with them.