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Divine Rainmaking Boy
Title:Divine Rainmaking Boy
Date:Kamakura period
Medium:Wood
Dimensions:42 x 11 x 8 in. (106.68 x 27.94 x 20.32 cm) 6 x 17 3/8 x 12 in. (15.24 x 4...
Creation Place:Japan
Credit Line:The William Hood Dunwoody Fund, Purchase through Art Quest 2002, and Gift o...
Accession Number:2002.218a,b
Location:G220
In Japan, anthropomorphic representations of indigenous Shinto_ gods were unknown before the adoption of Buddhism in the sixth century. Such gods were worshiped at sites associated with their presence: certain mountains, waterfalls, and unusually large rocks. Following the advent of Buddhism with its complex pantheon, Shinto_ists also began to make images. While sculptors fashioned Buddhist images in accordance with Indian and Chinese prototypes, they created Shinto_ images to resemble Japanese aristocrats.

This sculpture is a rare representation of the Shinto_ god Uho_-do_ji, or the "divine rainmaking boy." Uho_-do_ji is also a youthful manifestation of the Shinto_ sun goddess Amterasu-o_mikami. Demonstrating the fusion of Shinto_ and Buddhist beliefs in Japan, he holds a magic orb in his left hand, leans on a jeweled staff, and balances a "treasure tower of wisdom" on his head--all ritual implements associated with Buddhist worship.