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Used paper kimono worn during Buddhist rituals at Tōdaiji

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posted on 2025-01-22, 10:48 authored by Daphne Mohajer va PesaranDaphne Mohajer va Pesaran
Used paper kimono worn during Buddhist rituals at Tōdaiji. Made by Mashiko Endō, out of her own paper. Given to her as a gift after it was used during a series of annual rituals. During the rituals, participating monks carry big basket torches into the hall, and thus they get blackened with soot and sparks from the fire. One way to pray to the Buddha is to put both feet, hands, head, and body on the ground, which is called "Gotai Tōuchi", and which causes the paper kimono to become marked and torn. This is the technique for folding the kimono for storage.

Funding

Endangered Material Knowledge Programme

History

Session

T01

Rights owner

Daphne Mohajer va Pesaran

Cultural group

Japanese

Participants

Yūko Tokuriki, Daphne Mohajer va Pesaran

Country

Japan

Place

Shiroishi, Miyagi

Item/object

Tōdaiji kamiko

Materials

Bark-paper mulberry bark, Washi

Materials alt

agar agar

Cultural context/event

Ceremony

Social group setting

Interviewer-interviewee

Temporality

Late 20th-century, worn during the series of rituals at Tōdaiji Temple in Nara that takes place every year in March

Date of creation

2020-01-08

Unique ID

2019SG04-T01-0203

Usage metrics

    Endangered Material Knowledge Programme

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