
TheHakuhō period (白鳳時代,Hakuhō jidai; "white phoenix period") was an unofficialJapanese era name (年号,nengō; "year name") ofEmperor Tenmu[1] afterHakuchi[2] and beforeSuchō.[3] The duration of thisdiscrete non-nengō timespan lasted from 673 through 686.[1]
The Hakuhō period is more often used as a general term which describes a wider range of years.
Hakuhō is conventionally used to identify a broad historical and artistic period of the late seventh century and early eighth century.[1] The term is primarily used in art history and is thought to have been introduced at the 1910Japan–British Exhibition.[4]
In general historical contexts, theAsuka period is understood as overlapping the Hakuhō period; and the Hakuhō can be construed as having been followed by a Tempyō period in art history.[1] The Hakuhō period was marked by the rapid expansion ofBuddhism and its dissemination throughout Japan. Artistically the period was influenced directly by theSui andTang dynasties,[4] and influenced indirectly byGupta art from India.[1]
Beginning with the Taika Reforms, the period saw a shift towards more structured, more bureaucratic forms of government, based largely on Chinese models. The first "permanent" Imperial capital was established atFujiwara-kyō in 694. Though the capital was moved again only sixteen years later, this represented an important step in the development of theYamato state, the seat of power which had been quite transitory and nomadic up until this point.[5] The decades of the Hakuhō period also saw many other major developments in political structure and in culture, including the introduction of writing and the development of calligraphy in Japan. Chinese characters had been seen and used in Japan for centuries prior, but it was during the 7th century that, as one scholar describes it, "writing and the art of its production—or calligraphy—has a sudden and spectacular flowering".[6]
The term "Hakuhō period" is chiefly applied in discussions of architecture, sculpture, and painting.
Hundreds ofBuddhist temples were built in the Hakuhō period, includingKawara-dera,Daikandai-ji, andYakushi-ji in Fujiwara-kyō, instyles showing considerableTang-dynasty China influence. Wakakusa-dera, which had burnt down in 670, was also rebuilt at this time asHōryū-ji, showing the same stylistic influences.[7][8] FollowingBaekje's ruin in 660, many refugees were naturalised in Japan. And they played a major role in designing and constructing these temples, teaching and training their Japanese counterparts.
At the time, stone and bronze were the chief media used for Buddhist statues in Japan, and would remain so on the continent for quite some time to come.[9] However, in Japan, the wood carved statues which would come to dominate in later centuries began to appear as early as the Hakuhō period.
The statues in Hōryū-ji serve as good examples of Hakuhō period sculpture; nearly all date to that period.[10] Most are made of wood, with a single block used for the bodies, and separate blocks for secondary elements, such as demons upon which the deity treads, halos, and parts of the deities' skirts. All were originally painted and gilded, and bear rounder forms with a stronger impact of three-dimensionality than the Asuka period statues of earlier decades. In these aspects and others, they reflect strong stylistic influences from theThree Kingdoms of Korea,Tang-dynasty China, and from the stylistic heritage of theNorthern Qi andSui Dynasties which came before.[10] Another group of statues from the same temple show another important development, namely, the first use of lacquer not solely as a protective or decorative coating for statues, but as a material from which accessories, such as abodhisattva's jewellery, hair ornaments, and hair, might be made, to be attached onto the wooden sculpture.[10]
A series of mural paintings on the walls of thekondō ("Golden Hall"; Main Hall) of Hōryū-ji, depicting various Buddhist figures, represent some of the best extant examples of Hakuhō period painting. Though a 1949 fire left most of the paintings blackened to the point of illegibility, the process can still be determined. Plaster was applied to the walls layer by layer, each layer increasingly fine. Once the plaster was dry, holes were punched in the preliminary sketches for the painting (known as acartoon), and colored sand or powder was applied, passing through the holes and sticking to the surface of the wall, providing an outline or rough guideline for the painter to then follow. These Hōryū-ji murals represent two painting elements distinctive of this period: the use of red rather than black to outline the figures and, on other sections, a consistent line lacking calligraphic flourish and known as "iron wire" line.[11]
Yakushi-ji was founded in the Hakuhō period[4] in 680.[12] A number of Buddhist statues at Yakushi-ji temple are counted among the finest extant examples of Hakuhō period sculpture, reflecting the influence of Tang Chinese styles more strongly than their counterparts in Hōryū-ji.
A noteworthy Yakushi Triad (薬師三尊,Yakushi sanzon) consists of three sculptures representing theYakushi Buddha and two bodhisattvasNikkō andGakkō)[13] which are described as "full, fleshy figures conceived in the round and treated as completely natural forms".[11] These three figures were cast in bronze; and they were replaced in theEdo period after their destruction in earthquake or fire. The bodhisattvas are posed in the "hip-slung" (Sanskrit:tribhanga) pose and other Chinese motifs including grape leaves and theSymbols of the Four Directions are prevalent.[11]