

SF0 International by Flitworth
January 8th, 2008 5:34 AMNothing Lasts Forever
The Shadow is You
Document Growth

I was inspired to do this task when I saw that the murals at Wat Phra Keow are being restored. Wat Phra Keow is a famous temple in Bangkok that houses the Emerald Buddha (which is actually made of jade). All along the inside of the walls of the temple are illustrations of various stories relating to the Thai (theraveda) version of Buddhism. Most of my study of Buddhism is from a Japanese perspective, which is decidedly Shinto flavored. In contrast, Thai Buddhism is very Hindu flavored and they maintain the existence of Hindu gods like Hanuman in their stories.
I have always considered Buddhism to be the religion of impermanence. There is an acceptance of and a belief in constant change. We go through multiple iterations of different lives or states and at the point where we reach enlightenment - a pure, singular state - we disappear. "Nirvana" is derived from a word for "extinction." So, in essence, the moment we cease to change we cease to be. Impermanence on a cosmic scale, we are either changing or we do not exist.
Changing states, the impermanence of loyalties and physical shape, are also a feature of the stories of Thai Buddhism. One supernatural being can transform into any human shape and in one story takes on the form of Rama's wife, floating dead in a river. In another story Hanuman and another supernatural being transform into the corpse of a deer to upset a rival's ceremony.


The particular state of impermanence at Wat Phra Keow is that of its murals, which are fading over time. It was built in the late 1700's and they are now in the process of restoring sections of the murals. They are also repairing and replacing the coloured glass tiles that decorate the majority of the buildings within the Grand Palace complex. While the tiles can be replaced the statues cannot be revamped in the same way.

The beauty and mystique inspired by Wat Phra Keow and its murals are celebrated through another act of impermanence: tourism. It is money from tourists (Thai nationals pay nothing, or perhaps a nominal fee, to enter most temples and cultural sites in Bangkok) that help battle the ravages of time and pollution on the Wat and its many artistic works. It is tourism that allows people from all over the world to appreciate Thai culture and Buddhism as it is the religion that has inspired amazing paintings and structures.
While the money that tourism brings in is positive it is the impermanence of tourism that can be so damaging. People come to another region, take pictures, visit cultural sites, spend money, and leave. People also come to another region, pour money into the sex trade, leave garbage everywhere, present a negative impression of their home nations through rude and culturally insensitive behavior, and leave. Our presence is temporary and thus we do not need to worry about the long-term impact of our actions as tourists - we will never see these people again.

As this is technically an Aesthematics task I have never completed it but I was so taken by my shadow with devil horns that I was inspired to sneak this in. While never actually accused of evil I have some devilish tendencies and I like pointy things. I can be quite prickly and I tend to ask pointed questions.
I completed this task through the Praxis in November but what caught my eye in traveling was the amount of unexpected growth. The word growth also refers to something growing, existing or enlarging in places where it is not expected. Tumors are growths. There is undergrowth and overgrowth. I wanted to document the beauty of things growing in and around places in unexpected yet beautiful ways...



Paints

These bowls of paint were abandoned during the holiday weekend by whoever was working on the murals.
Old and New

Sadly, this is not a very good photo. I was attempting to capture the contrast between the pedestal on which this Buddha is mounted, which has just been re-tiled and sparkles beautifully in the sunlight, and the statue, which has suffered the ravages of the environment for hundreds of years and cannot be restored to its former glory.
So Very Meta

There are several layers of impermanence represented here. In a concrete, physical sense these paintings are impermanent, they have been restored, faded, fixed and so forth and are not the same as they were. Their meaning to Thais and to other viewers is also impermanent as, like any religion or culture, understanding tends to change with the times. Within the story the impermanence of our presence in the physical bodies is highlighted through the dead figure of Rama's wife Sita. However, as this is not really his wife but another being temporarily taking on the form of his wife as a trick it also harkens to the impermanence of our perception of the world. As with many of the tales I was told, the trick is figured out.
Transformed

Transformed to the corpse of a deer. Transformed to satiation for a hungry scavenger. Transformed to a distraction.
When You're Evil

For some reason devil horns were a very popular accessory in Bangkok around New Year's. I could not resist acquiring some. They match my elf ear prosthetics.
Tenacity

This amazing little flower (likely considered a weed) managed to settle itself in to the side of a structure in Wat Arun (The Temple of Dawn).
Peaceful Coexistence

This is a particularly famous site in Ayutthaya. The temple where this Buddha head is located was burnt to the ground during one of Thailand's wars with Burma. The head was removed from a Buddha statue but was to heavy to drag very far. Much of the ruins were taken over by jungle before being rediscovered and by that time this particular head was in the embrace of a large, beautiful tree.
Fuzzy Navel

The fuzzy patch on the right side of this spire is actually a very tenacious plant of some kind.
18 vote(s)

Meta tron
5
Lincøln
5
miss understanding
5
Tøm
5
Augustus deCorbeau
5
High Countess Emily
5
lucky penny
5
anna one
5
GlyphGryph
5
Ben Yamiin
5
Spidere
5
susy derkins
5
Charlie Fish
5
Sui Generis
5
rongo rongo
5
The Vixen
5
Blue
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Sushin
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(none yet)5 comment(s)
thailand is amazing. thank you for the pictures and the buddhist musings.
My favorites are the growth pictures, but the Buddhist reflections on impermanence are also a pleasure to read--and the shadow picture is great, too!
Nice work! The photos are beautiful. My favorite is the bird (crow? raven?) eating deer entrails.
The face peering out of the roots is a great picture.
Well done! My own Buddhist leanings are what inspired the creation of "nothing lasts forever". I love your horned shadow and your documentation of growth is absolutely beautiful!