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| Jōchō | |
|---|---|
| Name | Jōchō |
| Native name | 定朝 |
| Birth date | c. 1053 |
| Death date | 1132 |
| Occupation | Sculptor |
| Era | Heian period |
| Notable works | Amida Nyorai (Byōdō-in Phoenix Hall) |
| Movement | Japanese Buddhist sculpture |
| Nationality | Japanese |
Jōchō Jōchō was a preeminent Heian period sculptor whose canonical images of Amida Nyorai and other Buddhist icons transformed Japanese iconography and temple patronage. Active in the late 11th and early 12th centuries, he worked for aristocratic patrons and major temples, establishing formal conventions adopted by successors across Japan. His career intersects with figures, institutions, and sites pivotal to Heian culture and Buddhist devotional practice.
Born in the mid-11th century, Jōchō emerged during the reigns of emperors such as Emperor Shirakawa and Emperor Toba, within a court milieu shaped by families like the Fujiwara clan and the rise of Pure Land devotional movements associated with apocryphal texts and monastic networks. He received commissions from patrons connected to temples including Byōdō-in, Kōfuku-ji, and Hōryū-ji, and his career overlapped with monks and patrons such as Kūkai, Saichō, and members of the Minamoto clan. Records link him to ateliers mobilized by temple boards and aristocratic estates tied to the Imperial Household Agency and provincial authorities centered in Nara and Kyoto. Contemporary chronicles and temple registers reference his role in producing icons for ceremonies like enthronements, funerary rites, and Pure Land offerings associated with donors from the Fujiwara regency and provincial governors.
Jōchō established a standardized set of proportions and formal devices that reconciled continental models from Tang dynasty China and earlier Asuka period exemplars with indigenous aesthetics favored by the Heian court. He refined the yosegi zukuri technique, arranging multiple wooden blocks into a unified statue, a method with antecedents in Kamakura period workshops but innovated in execution under his direction. His Amida figures emphasize serene expressions, idealized geometry, and symmetrical drapery related to canons found in Indian Gupta art, Chinese Song sculpture, and earlier Gandhara precedents filtered through Korean Baekje and Silla transmissions. Jōchō's use of lacquer, gesso, and gilding paralleled conservation techniques practiced at Tōdai-ji and mirrored material choices seen in Todaiji sculpture and ritual objects utilized in ceremonies presided over by clergy like Eison and Hōnen.
His most celebrated commission is the Amida Nyorai for the Phoenix Hall of Byōdō-in, a centerpiece that influenced iconography across temples such as Kōfuku-ji, Enryaku-ji, and provincial temples under the kokubunji system. Other attributions include statues for halls at Kōzaiji, altarpieces linked to donors from the Fujiwara no Michinaga circle, and mobile reliquaries comparable to objects housed in collections formerly associated with Nanzen-ji and Daitoku-ji. Patrons who secured his services ranged from aristocrats aligned with the Sekkan system to warrior elites emerging among the Taira clan and Minamoto clan, and his commissions intersected with major construction projects like hall reconstructions at Hōryū-ji and ritual refurbishments at Kasuga Taisha.
Jōchō led a prolific workshop that trained sculptors and carvers who would propagate his canon across generation-spanning schools analogous to later lineages such as those tied to Unkei and Kaikei. His atelier system coordinated apprentices, joiners, lacquerers, and gilders similar to guild-like practices later codified in temple bureaus at Tōdai-ji and administrative offices serving the Imperial Court. Notable followers and descendants in the stylistic lineage include sculptors active in Nara and Kyoto who executed works for institutions like Kōfuku-ji and Byōdō-in and influenced subsequent masters connected to the sociopolitical shifts involving the Hōgen Rebellion and the consolidation of samurai patronage by the Kamakura shogunate.
Jōchō's aesthetic established normative measures for Amida and bodhisattva representations that remained authoritative through the Heian and into the Kamakura period, informing the practice of sculptors associated with major monastic centers like Enryaku-ji and milestone artists such as Unkei, Kōkei, and Kaikei. His formal solutions to scale, proportion, and material economy allowed temples across domains—from Yamato Province to regions under the control of clans like the Uesugi and Hojo—to commission images consistent with court taste. The visual language he codified appears in temple inventories, court diaries, and illustrated sutra scrolls connected to families including the Fujiwara, documents preserved in repositories like the imperial archives and collections later assembled by institutions such as Tokyo National Museum and regional museums founded in the modern era.
Jōchō worked during a period of aristocratic patronage dominated by the Fujiwara regency, shifting religious currents exemplified by Pure Land devotion and esoteric practices propagated by figures such as Kūkai and Saichō, and the gradual rise of warrior households including the Taira clan and Minamoto clan. Contemporary reception is documented in temple chronicles, court diaries, and later medieval compendia that cite his Amida images as exemplars of devotional efficacy and aesthetic refinement, referenced alongside monumental works at Tōdai-ji and artistic traditions rooted in exchanges with Song dynasty China and Korean polities. Posthumously, his name became a touchstone in debates over style and orthodoxy among sculptors active during the cultural reorientations of the Kamakura period and in restorations commissioned by shogunal and imperial patrons.
Category:Japanese sculptors Category:Heian period