Gyōdō


Gyōdō is a Japanese Buddhist ceremony.

Ceremonies

Gyōdō may refer to three distinct ceremonies: ritual circumambulation of temple buildings or images while chanting sutras; masked processions during memorial services; and, in Pure Land Buddhism, reenactments of the descent of Amida. Gyōdō ceremonies still take place annually on May 14 at Taima-dera, where they are also known as mukaekō or nerikuyō.

Masks

Surviving masks include a pair of masks dating from 1086 and 1334 at Tōdai-ji ; a set of ten masks dating from 1138 for use in the shōryō-e ceremonies at Hōryū-ji ; thirteen Heian-period masks from Mitsuki Hachimangū ; a Kamakura-period mask of Tamonten at the Tokyo National Museum; a thirteenth-century bodhisattva mask at the British Museum; a Kamakura-period bodhisattva mask at the National Gallery of Victoria; a fifteenth-century example at the Victoria and Albert Museum; and a pre-modern mask at the Smithsonian Institution. A late-Heian Taishakuten of uncertain provenance was auctioned by Christie's in 2010 for $20,000.