Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
This sculpture presents the historical Buddha Shakyamuni delivering his first sermon at the Deer Park in Sarnath, India, where he articulated his realization of the Four Noble Truths to the five ascetics who would become his first disciples. This episode, considered one of the Eight Great Events of the Buddha’s life, is iconographically indicated by his didactic hand gesture of dharmachakramudra , whereby the Buddha sets the chakra (wheel) of dharma (law) in motion. The two deer flanking a chakra on the sculpture’s plinth allude to this teaching. The paleography of the inscription preserved in the Buddha’s halo helps date the sculpture to the late tenth or early eleventh century.
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India
Tamil Nadu, near Nagapattinam — Buddha Shakyamuni Seat
Cambodia or Thailand — Buddha Enthroned on a Serpent (Naga)
Pakistan
Ancient region of Gandhara — Seated Buddha with Ha
Nepal
Kathmandu Valley — God Vishnu's Mount, Garuda, Standin
Mongolia
School of Zanabazar — Vairochana Buddha Seated Givi
India
Tamil Nadu, Nagapattinam — Standing Buddha with Left H
Bangladesh or Eastern India — Cosmic Form of Shiva (Sadashiv
Sri Lanka — Buddha Seated in Meditation (Dhyanamudra)
Japan — Seated Bodhisattva
Cambodia or Thailand — Buddha Enthroned on a Serpent (Naga)
Burma (Myanmar)
Pagan — Standing Buddha
Pakistan
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province, Swat Valley — Bodhisat