Art of Zen goes to New York

Buddhist ink paintings and calligraphies convey the irreverent and the profound with wry humor

Yamaoka Tesshū_Talismanic Dragon.jpg

Yamaoka Tesshu (1836–1888), "Talismanic Dragon," 19th century, hanging scroll, ink on paper. One of the works on display at "None Whatsoever," the new exhibition of Japanese art at the New York-based Japan Society. (Courtesy of the Gitter-Yelen Collection: Kurt A. Gitter, M.D. and Alice Yelen Gitter)

MICHIYO NAKAMOTO, Contributing writer

TOKYO -- Two bulging eyes are casting a piercing look at an inscription at the top of an ink painting depicting Bodhidharma, a sixth-century monk known in Japan as Daruma and credited with founding the Zen branch of Mahayana Buddhism.

The message conveyed by the artist, the Zen monk Hakuin Ekaku (1685-1768), is serious, but difficult to translate. A loose translation would be: "Look inside yourself to become a Buddha." Tiffany Lambert, curator of a new exhibition of Japanese art at the New York-based Japan Society, prefers: "Direct pointing to the human heart, see your nature -- and become Buddha."

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