Hell Scroll (Nara National Museum)

For the Hell Scroll held at the Tokyo National Museum, see Hell Scroll (Tokyo National Museum).
Hell Scroll
Artist Unknown
Year 12th century
Type Color on paper
Dimensions 26.5 cm × 453.9 cm (10.4 in × 178.7 in)
Location Nara National Museum, Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan

Hell Scroll (地獄草紙 jigokuzōji) is a scroll depicting seven out of the sixteen lesser hells presented in Kisekyō ("Sutra of the World Arising"). Six of the paintings are accompanied by text, which all begin with the phrase "There is yet another hell", following a description of what the sinners depicted did to end up in this particular hell. The seven hells depicted are the Hell of Excrement, Hell of Measures, Hell of the Iron Mortar, Hell of the Flaming Rooster, Hell of the Black Sand Cloud, Hell of Pus and Blood and Hell of Foxes and Wolves. It is considered likely that the scroll corresponds to the Paintings of the Six Paths commissioned by Emperor Goshirakawa in the 12th century. This handscroll was preserved in Daishō-in in Higashiokubo, Tokyo until the Meiji period,[1] when it came into the hands of the Hara family of Kanagawa, later ending up in the possession of the Japanese government.

The whole scroll

Image of the whole scroll.
The whole scroll. Except for the last section all paintings are accompanied by a text starting with the phrase: "There is yet another hell,..." followed by a description of the cause of the sinner's fall into this particular hell.


See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hell Scroll (Nara National Museum).

References

  1. "Jigoku-zōshi". Encyclopedia of Japan. Tokyo: Shogakukan. 2012. Retrieved 2012-04-27.

"Hell Scroll". Emuseum. National Institutes for Cultural Heritage. Retrieved 2010-11-08. 


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