

Taoist Official of Water
(detail)
Traditionally attributed to
Wu Daozi (active 8th century)
Southern Song dynasty, first half of 12th century
Hanging scroll; ink, colors, and gold on silk
125.5 x 55.9 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston;
Special Chinese and Japanese Fund
cat. no. 71
Taoist Official of Water
This is the final painting
of the Southern Song triptych depicting the Three Officials. (The first
two are the Taoist Official of Heaven and Taoist Official of Earth.) In
it, the Official of Water travels through the rough waves of a churning
ocean. He rides on a dragon, a traditional symbol of rain, while two
attendants ride on sea turtles. Because of their unusual longevity,
these turtles represented long life and divinity. The Official of Water
is further accompanied by several energetic figures, many of whom are
wearing armor and carrying weapons. These details emphasize the god's
role as a judge, surrounded by those who can enforce his will. In the
bottom right of the painting, the roofs of submerged palace buildings
can be seen. These may represent either the palace of the underwater
Dragon King or the dwelling of the Official of Water himself. In the
sky above the ocean is the Duke of Thunder, a winged, animal-headed god
surrounded by a circle of giant drums, which his servants strike to
create thunder.
The dark, wet ink used to paint the clouds around the Duke of Thunder,
paired with the vigorous movement of the waves, suggest that the sky
and ocean are about to burst into a violent storm. This concern for
atmosphere is characteristic of the best Song-dynasty landscape
painting.
TOMORROW
WE BEGIN A NEW STUDY: THE TAOIST RENAISSANCE
R E V I E W
T A O I
S M A N D T
H E A R T
S O F C H I
N A

THE
TAOIST CHURCH
The
Taoist Pantheon
Overview
Broadly speaking,
there are two kinds of deities in Taoism.
The first formed spontaneously out of the primordial energies at the
beginning of the world. These are the highest gods of Taoism who hold
titles like "Celestial Worthy" or "Emperor." These gods hold court in
celestial paradises and govern a complex hierarchy of lesser gods
similar to the hierarchy of emperor and officials on earth. Many of the
most fundamental gods of this category developed between the second and
sixth centuries A.D. and were consolidated into a well-defined pantheon
by the Tang dynasty. Among them are the Three Purities3
(including Laozi) and the Three Officials. As pure embodiments of the
Way, these Taoist gods are abstract figures defined more by their rank
than by their personal mythology. They do not accept sacrifices of food
or alcohol and can only be contacted through official requests written
by Taoist priests.
The second category
of Taoist deities consists of human
beings who—through learning, self-discipline, alchemy, or other
means—have purified themselves of mortal imperfections and become gods,
a transformation often described as "ascending to the heavens in broad
daylight."
© many thanks to
the Chicago Institute of Art
glossary:
Three
Officials a
triad of
Taoist deities in charge of heaven, earth, and the waters under the
earth. The Three Officials record people's good and bad deeds and
determine their life span and destiny.
Southern Song
dynasty (1127—1279)
the
period within the Song dynasty during which invasions from the north
and west forced the move to a southern capital, Hangzhou. Art during
the Southern Song period is characterized by lyrical, intimate
landscape painting and ceramic works noted for their quiet subtlety.
classic
of the Way and Its Power (Daode jing) (also spelled Tao Te Ching) the
earliest-known text of the Taoist
tradition, which is said to have been authored by the legendary figure
Laozi. The text is actually a compilation of various writings collected
over the course of generations. It may have assumed its current form by
the third or fourth century B.C. The Classic of the Way and Its
Power includes poetic passages, sayings, fragments of political
texts, and passages intended for recitation. It served as the
foundation for both philosophical and religious Taoism.
White Cloud
Monastery
(Baiyun Guan) one
of the most famous Taoist
monasteries in
China. The temple, located in Beijing, was
first built in the Tang
dynasty and assumed its present name when it was rebuilt in 1394 during
the Ming dynasty.
Zhang Daoling
(also known as Celestial Master Zhang) Taoist
leader, from the second century
A.D., who converted the philosophical ideas of Taoism into a popular
religion. He is said to have written approximately 24 works of Taoist
scripture, cured the sick through incantation, and taught people to
confess their wrong deeds. The image of Zhang Daoling riding a tiger
became popular for expelling insects, curing diseases, and protecting
the family from calamity.
Way of the
Celestial Masters
the
first formal Taoist religious organization, founded in the late Han
dynasty by Taoist master Zhang Daoling, who claimed to have received
teachings from the deified Laozi. Members of the Celestial Masters sect
addressed the spiritual needs of the community. Communal rites were
performed regularly, especially during seasonal changes. The Celestial
Masters sect was also responsible for absorption, which required the
recording of misdeeds on a paper addressed to one of the Three
Officials (heaven, earth, or water). The movement remains active in
China to this day.
3
Three
Purities (Three
Clarities) the highest deities in Taoism, they reside over
the
three greatest heavenly realms. Their names are the Celestial Worthy of
Primordial Beginning, the Celestial Worthy of Numinous Treasure, and
the Celestial Worthy of the Way and Its Power.
numinous
having spiritual, mysterious, or holy qualities
hierarchic
scale an
artist's method of indicating the importance of individuals through
relative size, regardless of actual dimensions. Persons of lesser
importance are thus depicted smaller in size in relation to their
superiors.
Complete
Realization
sect a Taoist monastic order founded in northern
China
around 1160. The sect combines the teachings of Taoism, Buddhism, and
Confucianism. The goal of the sect's followers was to attain
immortality by perfectly realizing the Tao in themselves. Both male and
female members of this sect practiced a strict monastic lifestyle. It
survives today as one of the two major sects of Taoism, and its
headquarters is the White Cloud Monastery in Beijing.
religious Taoism
a
term used to define Taoism as an organized, institutionalized religion
as opposed to the original philosophical tradition. Religious Taoism
developed between the second and fifth centuries A.D. and built on the
earlier philosophical foundations. Unlike philosophical Taoism,
religious Taoism incorporated new ritual practices and religious
institutions, established a priesthood, defined the Taoist Canon, and
created a pantheon of deities.
Taoist
Canon the
collected scriptures of Taoism, systematically catalogued by imperial
decree for the first time in the fifth century A.D. The present Taoist
Canon dates to the 15th century.
Copyright
© 2000,
The Art Institute of Chicago.
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