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Homage to the Highest Power

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Central Figure: Lord of the Southern Dipper

Homage to the Highest Power (朝元圖) is a prime example of Daoist paintings in the Royal Ontario Museum collection. The wall painting was created during the late Yuan Dynasty, c. 1271 – 1368 AD. The painting is colored pigments mixed with clay and plaster. It measures 306.5 cm high and 1042 cm in length. This painting is similar to those found in Sanqing Hall of the Yongle Monastery in Shanxi province. The Sanqing Hall paintings are dated by an inscription to 1325 AD. Based on the strong stylistic affinities, this work can also be dated to the Yuan dynasty (AD 1279–1368).

Daoist imagery

Homage to the Highest Power is a popular theme in Daoist pictorial art. Daoist theology advocates the concept of Dao (the Way), a primeval force which gives form to all things in the universe. Homage to Dao is expected of all regular followers of Dao.

Description

The wall painting is one of a pair from the Pingyang region of southern Shanxi province. This work was created as decoration for the west wall of a temple hall or worship space. It is symmetrically balanced leading your eye first to the central figures and then fanning out on either side. It shows a procession of heavenly beings moving at a leisurely pace to pay homage to the Supreme Power.

The procession is led by a fierce warrior, the Lord of the Southern Dipper (Sagittarius). He leads nine star spirits, female attendants with plant offerings, three important deities, and personifications of the twelve Earthly Branches. The three deities have been identified as Laozi (founder of Daoism) with the Jade Emperor and the Empress of Heaven, or Laozi with the Holy Ancestor and Ancestress of the Song Dynasty (AD 960-1279).[1] [2] [3] [4]

Central images in the mural Homage to the Highest Power
Left side of mural
Right side of mural

References

  1. ^ White, William C. (1940). Chinese Temple Frescoes: A Study of Three Wall-Paintings of the Thirteenth Century. Royal Ontario Museum of Archaeology, University of Toronto Press.
  2. ^ Tsang, Ka Bo (1992). Further Observations on the Yuan Wall Painter Zhu Haogu and the Relationship of the Chunyang Hall Wall Paintings to "The Maitreya Paradise" at the ROM. Artibus Asiae.
  3. ^ Zeng, Jiabao. December Zhongguo wenwu shijie, 52 Dno. 12: 109-21.
  4. ^ Giuffrida, Noelle (2008). Representing the Daoist God Zhenwu, the Perfected Warrior, in Late Imperial China. Master of Art Thesis. University of Wisconsin, Madison- 1999.