Artwork Page for Hotei

Details / Information for Hotei

Hotei

布袋図

mid-1500s
painter
calligrapher
(Japanese, dates unknown)
Measurements
Mounted with knobs: 170.5 x 53.7 x 2.5 cm (67 1/8 x 21 1/8 x 1 in.); Painting: 85.6 x 35.6 cm (33 11/16 x 14 in.)
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Hotei is a semilegendary figure who may have lived from the late 800s to the early 900s. He later became prominent in Chan (or Zen, in Japanese) Buddhist literature. He epitomizes the freewheeling figure outside the mainstream monastic system—in which people strive for enlightenment through prescribed methods—who nonetheless attains a high level of spiritual awakening. The inscription warns against seeking enlightenment by conscious effort:

Big stomach, gaping garment,
Treasures gathered deep in the bottom of his bag,
Passing through the sky is another road,
Do not seek that to which his fingertip points.
A hanging scroll in black ink depicts a full-length portrait of Hotei, a man with light skin tone and a large belly, facing our right. He has a bald head and beard, wearing loose robes. Smiling with open mouth and narrowed eyes, Hotei stands with a large, faint sack behind him. Columns of Japanese calligraphy fill the upper half. Red seals appear below the text and in the bottom right corner.

Hotei

mid-1500s

Yamada Dōan I (Juntei), Tōkei Jakurin

(Japanese, d. 1573), (Japanese, dates unknown)
Japan, Muromachi period (1392–1573)

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