The Yale Parinirvana maintains the conventions of the
Parinirvana scene, based upon the first chapter of the
Mahāyāna Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra, where in
Kushinagar, the disciples, mortals, royal patrons, and demons gather and mourn his passing. Figures in the painting include his half-brother
Nanda, the
ascetic Subhadra,
Ānanda (who lies fainted), the disciple Aniruddha, who tries with multiple attempts to revive him. On the front of the reclining couch, multiple bodhisattvas lie beside him, including
Kṣitigarbha, dressed in soft-green monk robes, holding the
cintamani and a staff. Behind the couch,
Indra and retainer
Vaiśravaṇa, a portable stupa in hand, stands behind him overcome with emotion. Even their adversaries,
Vemacitrin are seen mourning besides them, framed by whitened trees, though his minions look on suspiciously. Noted is that the painting on the upper right depicts
Maya, the mother of the Buddha, who long since died, descending down from the heavens to oversee his passing, escorted by Aniruddha. The scale of the painting depicts people and entities who intersected with the Buddha in the past, present and future in order to converge at this one event. The atmosphere and crowded details of the painting is scene to emulate the local aspect of 14th century Japanese street life, as if to emulate a "Kyoto street fair" with carnivalesque aesthetics. Kṣitigarbha, or Jizo is seen not in mourning as he is prominently depicted in
Japanese Buddhism as a figure who transverses the afterlife and rebirth, saving those who are lost. == References ==