Phoenix Hall (At the Byodoin)
PHOENIX HALL (AT THE BY?D?IN)
The extant Phoenix Hall (H??d?) of By?d?in is located on the west bank of the Uji River southeast of Kyoto. Regent Fujiwara Yorimichi (990–1074) transformed an inherited villa into the (now lost) Main Hall of By?d?in in 1051, his sixtieth year. The unprecedented Phoenix Hall, consecrated in 1053, was built as a three-dimensional representation of the depiction of Amida's Sukh?vat? Pure Land, as found in the Guan Wuliangshou jing (Visualization S?tra). With its birdlike wings and tail, the Phoenix Hall faces east and was designed to be viewed from a small palace on the opposite shore. The hall and its central Amida (Amit?bha) icon served as the focus of meditation and as a backdrop to ceremonies. Narrative paintings depicting the nine stages of rebirth adorned the doors and walls surrounding the icon, each showing a seasonal landscape as the setting for a "descent of Amida" (raig?) to recognizably Japanese devotees. Above the walls, fifty-two small wood-carved bodhisattvas and musicians complete the effect of Amida's descent.
Mimi Yiengpruksawan has made a convincing case that the Phoenix Hall was the private domain of Yorimichi and his descendants, rather than the quasipublic focus of the temple. Esoteric Tendai ceremonies were carried out in front of the Main Hall icon, Dainichi Nyorai, while the Phoenix Hall appears to have been Yorimichi's private devotional chapel where he himself could meditate upon Sukh?vat?. After his death, his daughter Kanshi lived at By?d?in and carried out ceremonies on behalf of her father and other relatives, both at the temple's s?tra repository and at the Phoenix Hall.
See also:Japan, Buddhist Art in
Bibliography
Akiyama Terukazu. "The Door Paintings in the Phoenix Hall of By?d?in as Yamatoe." Artibus Asiae 53, nos. 1–2 (1993): 144–167.
Yiengpruksawan, Mimi Hall. "The Phoenix Hall at Uji and the Symmetries of Replication." Art Bulletin 77, no. 4 (1995): 648–672.
Karen L. Brock
