Sculptural Absence: Jaina Iconography and the Concept of Body Abandonment
Prof. Dr. Julia A.B. Hegewald
5pm Wednesday 20 January 2027
Auditorium, St John's College, University of Oxford
(Free Admission)
Leaving behind all worldly attachments, liberating the mind and finally abandoning one’s own body at death play crucial roles in Jaina religious thought and ritual practice. For this reason, the concept of absence is a central theme in Jaina sculptural expressions. The idea of a bodiless soul without materiality or shape presented the artists working for the Jaina community with a creative challenge. In this context, they fashioned empty cut-out silhouettes of the fully enlightened, disembodied souls (siddhas), providing simply the contour of their former bodily shape. They also fashioned foot representations which resemble imprints, marking the last contact of saintly teachers with the ground before their release. In addition, there will be discussion of the perceived total mental and spiritual absence attributed to fully represented, material figural icons carved in the round, which were fashioned of the twenty-four enlightened saints (Jinas), as well as the emaciation of an ideal Jaina practitioner’s own ascetic body.
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