Public lecture by Martina Stoye and Dr. Peera Panarut
The ‘Book of the Three Worlds’ (‘Traiphum’; inv. no. II 650, Museum für Asiatische Kunst, Berlin) is one of the most beautiful, oldest and magnificent manuscripts on Buddhist cosmology from Thailand. The thirty-three-metre long leporello manuscript was commissioned by King Taksin of Thonburi in 1776 from four royal painters and four royal scribes. In 2023, the Berlin museum programme CoMuse allowed collaborative research to be carried out of its images and texts. It focused on a six-metre-long section of the manuscript: the idyllic and secluded world of the Himavanta forest with its beautiful lakes, animals and plants, the course of the southern stream from the Himavanta forest to the human world and the many Jātakas (pre-birth stories of the Buddha) situated therein. The collaborative team not only analysed the interplay of text and image in the manuscript, but also explored the connections between what is depicted here and other textual traditions of Thailand.
Time
Monday, 01.06.26 - 06:15 PM
- 07:45 PM
Event format
Talk
Topic
Asian art history, South East Asian art, Museum studies
Speaker
Martina Stoye und Dr. Peera Panarut
Target groups
All interested
Students
Researchers
Languages
English
Location
Abteilung für Asiatische und Islamische Kunstgeschichte, Adenauerallee 10, 53113 Bonn
Room
Lecture room and via Zoom
Reservation
not required
Registration/Ticket
Organizer
Department of Asian and Islamic Art History
Contact