schema:description 11 | "wall_description: Zaō Gongen is the deity of Mount Kinpu, in the Yoshino Mountains south of Nara. His iconography is based on Buddhist guardian figures, a fitting guise for the protector of Shugendō, a Shinto-Buddhist cult devoted to ascetic practices and mountain worship. This fragment is from a votive mirror called a kakebotoke with metal fittings at the top through which a cord could be used to hang it....(more)" |
schema:description | "measurements: Overall: 25.8 x 17.8 cm (10 3/16 x 7 in.)" |
schema:description | "creditline: The Severance and Greta Millikin Purchase Fund" |
schema:description | "current_location: 003 Special Exhibition Hall" |
schema:description | "collection: Japanese Art" |
schema:description | "id: 153343" |
schema:description | "type: Metalwork" |
schema:description | "tombstone: Zaō Gongen, 1100–1185. Japan, Heian Period (794-1185). Gilt bronze with repoussé and incised details; overall: 25.8 x 17.8 cm (10 3/16 x 7 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, The Severance and Greta Millikin Purchase Fund 1986.47...(more)" |
schema:description | "digital_description: Zaō Gongen is the deity of Mount Kinpu, in the Yoshino Mountains south of Nara. This fragment is from a votive mirror called a kakebotoke with metal fittings at the top through which a cord could be used to hang it....(more)" |
schema:description | "technique: Gilt bronze with repoussé and incised details" |
schema:description | "culture: Japan, Heian Period (794-1185)" |