● On view now — Gallery 103
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
This figure is said to represent the seventh-century Korean monk Hyeja, the foremost spiritual teacher of the first great patron of Buddhism in Japan, Prince Shotoku (574-622). The sculpture is made in the ichiboku technique, utilizing only a single block of wood. Its dramatic power is enhanced by the natabori technique, in which the sculptor's chisel marks are clearly visible on the surface.
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Central Thailand — Standing Buddha
Burma (Myanmar) — Crowned and Bejewelled Buddha
China — Monk
China — Standing Attendant
China — Monk
China — Standing Figure
China — Civil Official (Wenguan)
Korea — Standing Buddha
China — Standing Attendant
Japanese — Jizo Bosatsu
China; probably Shaanxi province — Female Attendant (Tomb Fi
China — Standing Court Official