Buddhist Billboard



Large Buddhist painting from Buseoksa. 1684. Hanging scroll 925x577cm. Colour on silk. National Museum of Korea, Seoul.

Apparently these types of massive scrolls (9 meters high, more than 5.5 meters wide each) where hung from buildings and/or frame structures to act as backdrops to monastery outdoor events, to be seen from far way and retold stories by the use of symbolic imagery.

From the guide book:
This hanging scroll, painted for the monastery Buseoksa in 1684, depicts the central part Sakyamuni Buddha preaching the Lotus Sutra on Mt. Gridhrakuta. The Buddha is surrounded by his ten great disciples, bodhisattvas, sravakas (voice hearers), the four heavenly kings and vajra-bearers. In the upper part, a Buddha triad is shown preaching, with Vairocana in the middle, Bhaisaiyaguru in the left and Amitabha in the right. The two Buddhas in the left and right from another triad in combination below, as the Buddhas of the three realms.


Unfortunately this image is of very poor quality and doesn't come close to showing the grandeur of this piece, since you are allowed only non-flash, non-tripod photography inside the museum (understandable). Maybe you know of a better image of this scroll? Please do let me know. The one in the guide book is terribly cropped but I might insert it to show the great detailing.