image of A Discussion of Form and Function Regarding the Buddhist Cave Sites along the Silk Road
Lecture

A Discussion of Form and Function Regarding the Buddhist Cave Sites along the Silk Road


Online Event

Online Discussion hosted by the BuddhistRoad project, CERES. 

The discussion will take place online via ZOOM on 9 November 2022 at 5 pm (CET).

An online discussion between Robert Sharf (Berkeley), Nobuyoshi Yamabe (Tokyo), Carmen Meinert and Henrik H. Sørensen of the BuddhistRoad Project concerning Buddhist usage and practice in the cave sanctuaries located along the Northern Part of the Silk Road in Central Asia. The discussion takes the views presented in Sharf’s paper “Art in the Dark,” and the response by Henrik Sørensen in “Light on Art in the Dark” as the points of departure.

In the past decade there has been an ongoing debate as regards form and function of the Buddhist cave-sanctuaries located along the Silk Road, i.e., were they temples, places of active practice and worship, or were they mostly, ancestral commemorative spaces that were not visited, but rather left in darkness as monuments of piety and prestige? If they were places of worship and practice, how did that express itself, if the caves functioned as actual temples with a monastic population living in them, what is the evidence for this, and if places of meditation, on the basis of what may this be established? Is it at all possible to gauge function from the physical forms or decoration of the caves? Were there different types of usage depending on the cultures that used them? The discussion will centre on these issues, and the participants will present their respective views and argue for them on the basis of their research. Those attending the meeting are invited to participate in the discussion, and to the extent possible have prepared questions or comments.

In order to follow the discussion and the presentations, it is recommended to read the following three articles beforehand:

Robert Sharf. “Art in the Dark: The Ritual Context of Buddhist Caves in Western China.” In Art of Merit: Studies in Buddhist Art and Its Conservation, edited by David Park, Kuenga Wangmo, and Sharon Cather, 3865. London: Archetype Publications, Courtauld Institute of Art, 2013.           https://www.academia.edu/27245928/Art_in_the_dark_the_ritual_context

Henrik H. Sørensen. “Light on ‘Art in the Dark’: On Buddhist Practices and Worship in the Mogao Caves.” BuddhistRoad Paper 5.6 (2022). https://omp.ub.rub.de/index.php/BuddhistRoad/catalog/view/200/177/1126

Carmen Meinert. “Beyond Spatial and Temporal Contingencies: Tantric Rituals in Eastern Central Asia Under Tangut Rule, 11th13th C.” In Buddhism in Central Asia II—Practices and Rituals, Visual and Material Transfer, edited by Yukiyo Kasai and Henrik H. Sørensen, 313365. Leiden: Brill, 2022. https://static.ceres.rub.de/media/filer_public/35/08/35089c9a-75fc-4ad8-be31-bd555ceacad1/9789004507937_16-meinert.pdf

 

To join the discussion, please pre-register until 8 November 2022, 5 pm (CET) at: 

https://ruhr-uni-bochum.zoom.us/meeting/register/u5ckcOuqpzsvHdYdw7uAUnaB9WN28b3AGTOv

 

Affiliated Persons

Photograph of Tanja Heilig B.A.

Tanja Heilig B.A.

Contact

Universitätsstr. 90a
44789  Bochum
Office 4.08
tanja.heilig@rub.de
Photograph of Prof. Dr. Carmen Meinert

Prof. Dr. Carmen Meinert

Speaker

Universitätsstr. 90a
44789  Bochum
Office 1.05
+49 234 32-28783
carmen.meinert@rub.de
Photograph of Dr. Henrik Hjort Sørensen

Dr. Henrik Hjort Sørensen

Speaker

Universitätsstr. 90a
44789  Bochum
Office 4.08
+49 234 32-21683
hensor@hotmail.com