Date:16th century Culture:China Medium:Plain-weave silk with supplementary weft patterning Dimensions:Overall: 14 1/4 x 5 in. (36.2 x 12.7cm) Classification:Textiles-Woven Credit Line:Rogers Fund, 1946 Accession Number:46.186.50 Sutras printed in the accordion-fold format were often encased by covers wrapped in decorative silks. Covers both protected the sacred words and presented the sutras in beautiful envelopes that signaled the importance of the contents within. These examples from the sixteenth century indicate the variety of sutra cover motifs, including some seemingly irrelevant to Buddhist philosophy, such as dragons, phoenixes, or the character shou, meaning longevity
Date:16th century Culture:China Medium:Plain-weave silk with supplementary weft patterning Dimensions:Overall: 14 1/4 x 5 in. (36.2 x 12.7cm) Classification:Textiles-Woven Credit Line:Rogers Fund, 1946 Accession Number:46.186.50 Sutras printed in the accordion-fold format were often encased by covers wrapped in decorative silks. Covers both protected the sacred words and presented the sutras in beautiful envelopes that signaled the importance of the contents within. These examples from the sixteenth century indicate the variety of sutra cover motifs, including some seemingly irrelevant to Buddhist philosophy, such as dragons, phoenixes, or the character shou, meaning longevity