Últimas noticias - Buddha
Japanese Buddha statues trace over 1,400 years of Buddhist history, from early Korean‑influenced bronzes to refined wooden masterpieces and colossal Great Buddhas (Daibutsu).
They reflect how Japan absorbed continental Buddhism and gradually developed a distinctly Japanese visual language for the Buddha and related deities.
Buddhism’s rejection of an eternal soul shifts meditation away from discovering a fixed inner essence and toward seeing experience as a dynamic, impersonal process.
This not‑self view (anattā) changes how meditators relate to thoughts, emotions, the body, and even enlightenment itself.
The religious ambitions of the Khmer kings, especially Suryavarman II, directly drove Angkor Wat’s vast scale, cosmic layout, and extraordinary decorative program.
The temple was conceived as both a divine residence and a royal funerary monument, so its grandeur had to match the king’s desire to embody and immortalize his religious devotion.
The Dvaravati Buddha refers to Buddha images created under the Mon-Dvaravati culture of central Thailand between roughly the 6th and 11th centuries, and these sculptures are among the earliest, most influential Buddhist icons in mainland Southeast Asia.
They crystallize a distinct Thai–Mon Buddhist aesthetic that bridges Indian models and later Khmer, Sukhothai, and Lanna imagery, while embodying early Theravāda and Mahāyāna devotional practices in the Chao Phraya basin.
The Meditation Buddha stands as both a spiritual guide and an enduring work of art, beckoning viewers toward inner stillness and enlightened clarity in a busy world.
Con una selección diversa proveniente directamente de toda Asia, ofrecemos esculturas de Buda de piedra que son decorativas y significativas, lo que las hace perfectas para hogares, espacios de meditación o regalos.
Cada pieza de nuestra colección habla de una calidad excepcional, autenticidad y una conexión con el patrimonio de países como Sri Lanka y Camboya.