Watch previously unseen footage of conservation and scientific research on the impressive statue of the Amitābha Buddha.
See our scientists and conservators in action as they work on the 5.78 m marble statue located in the North Stairs of the Museum.
Introduction
A massive figure of Amitābha Buddha stands on a lotus base, made of white marble, with traces of gilding and pigments and a visible joint at the Buddha's waist. Two hands are missing but the wooden dowels and iron brackets installed at the end of arms to hold the hands remain. According to the inscription on the base, it was dedicated in AD 585.
Conservators and scientists at work
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The in-situ treatment involved removing a build up of dust from the statue, which stands an impressive 5.78m tall and has traces of gilding and paint. Scientists used scanning electron microscopy to determine that wood from a jujube tree was used for the dowels that held the Buddha’s now-lost arms and hands. The cleaning also fully revealed an inscription that had been partially masked, which links the colossal statue to the Chongguang Temple in Hebei Province, Northern China, and to 80 members of a Buddhist society known as the Yi-yi.
This project was made possible by funding from the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Art Conservation Project.