Art That Breathes: Lewis deSoto’s Paranirvana (self-portrait)

Anya Montiel
An enormous, inflated Buddha-like figure reclines on its side in a large room. He is made of a gray-colored cloth that is printed with all his facial and bodily features, including curly hair, an exposed nipple, and draping robes.
Lewis deSoto, Paranirvana (self-portrait), 1999

Lewis deSoto’s Paranirvana (self-portrait) is a 26-foot long sculpture influenced by the artist’s engagement with Buddhism. The sculpture depicts a figure reclining on its right side; its disposition closely based on a twelfth-century stone Buddha at Gal Vihara in Sri Lanka. Unlike its solid stone predecessor, deSoto’s work, made from painted polyethylene cloth, is hollow, filled only by air from a fan that keeps the sculpture inflated. The resemblance to the reclining Buddha is nonetheless remarkable, from the curls of hair to the folds of the robe, the one exception being that deSoto superimposed his own facial features, complete with goatee, on this Buddha. These alterations to material and the personalization of the piece that occurs when it becomes a self-portrait, make particular claims on this representation and shape its possible meanings.

deSoto was born in San Bernardino, California in 1954 to a Latina mother and a Cahuilla (Native American) father. Raised a Roman Catholic, the artist has been a student of Buddhism for more than thirty years. Initially he studied philosophy at University of California, Riverside where a professor who was formerly a Jesuit priest encouraged him to learn more about Buddhism and Hinduism. deSoto decided to minor in religious studies as a complement to his studio art major. He also did coursework with Buddhist scholars Francis H. Cook at Riverside and Masao Abe at the Claremont Graduate School where he completed his MFA in 1981. He has been a professor of art at San Francisco State University since 1988. His body of work ranges across many media. He has often created culturally-specific and site-specific installations, transforming spaces through light, audio, and video technologies. As a conceptual artist, he generally works with immediately recognizable objects, altering their meaning in exhibition settings.

A view from the head of an inflated sculpture of Buddha captures the creases in the seams of its head pillow and on the sewn sections of its face, including a protruding nose and topknot.

Detail of Paranirvana (self-portrait)

In 1998, deSoto’s father, a man the artist considered indestructible, passed away. At the wake for his father, deSoto approached the open casket and touched his father’s chest, noting with some wonder that it felt cold and hollow like a drum. deSoto relates that he sensed then that the body was only a shell, and his father was not there. His father’s death, furthermore, invited him to contemplate his own mortality. deSoto asked himself, “what happens when you die? What is that experience like?”1

deSoto recalled the event of parinirvana or the “great liberation” where Buddha entered an enlightened “state of ultimate spiritual transcendence,” released from the cycle of death and rebirth.2  The historical Buddha, Siddhartha Gautama, while he lay dying from food poisoning, gave lessons about consciousness and samsara (the cycle of birth, life, death, and rebirth). deSoto looked at the Gal Vihara Buddha, which depicts the parinirvana, and thought about recreating a similar self-portrait that would be large in size but light in weight. deSoto superimposed his face on a photographic image of the reclining Buddha, and a San Diego company produced an identical custom inflatable sculpture with airbrushed detailing. In idealizing his version of parinirvana, deSoto entitled it Paranirvana to express a “large liberation.”3

  • 1
    Lewis deSoto, artist, personal interview, 30 June 2012.
  • 2
    Lewis deSoto, artist, personal interview, 6 March 2012.
  • 3
    Lewis deSoto, artist, personal interview, 17 September 2012.

From afar, deSoto’s inflatable Buddha gives a trompe l’oeil effect with its gray-blue hue mimicking stone.1  Upon closer observation, creases in the seams of the cloth are evident. Also, the sculpture makes noise—a hum emanates from the fan inflating it. deSoto purposely added sound, giving it breath.5 In Buddhism, a mindful breath is an essential part of practice. Buddha taught, “Breathing in, I see the earth element in me. Breathing out, I smile to the earth element in me.”6   Breath is a sign of life and connects living beings to the lived universe.

Although hidden from view, the fan is an important component of Paranirvana. Symbolically, it provides life—and death—to the sculpture. The sculpture arrives at a venue rolled in a small crate. As the sculpture lies flat on the floor, the fan rouses movement and brings it shape, slowly filling every cubic inch with air. When fully inflated, Paranirvana rises to a height of six feet and spreads to occupy twenty-six feet in length. Once the fan is unplugged, the air seeps through an opening in the back. deSoto describes that moment as “its last…breath.”7  Its end is peaceful; the head falls deeper into the pillow and the body gradually flattens. The sculpture reaches full deflation in thirty minutes with every part sinking into the ground.

The breathing cycle of Paranirvana through inflation and deflation is essential to the work and has become an event itself. When the sculpture traveled to Chicago’s Loyola University Museum as part of the group exhibition, “The Missing Piece: Artists Consider the Dalai Lama,” the museum invited visitors to watch it deflate and return for its re-inflation on December 1, World AIDS Day.8  Curators and educators staged Paranirvana, in this context, as a symbol of remembrance and hope for those living with or lost to HIV/AIDS. The re-inflation embodied concepts of presence and rebirth, appropriated from Buddhism.

During the Tokyo showing of “The Missing Piece” exhibition, Japanese design director Gaku Okubo set to mystical music a time-lapse video of Paranirvana’s inflation. He uploaded the video online in July 2011 and dedicated it to the victims of the Japanese tsunami and to Okubo’s late father. Okubo empathized with deSoto in the shared experience of the deaths of their fathers. Adopting an exhibition frame similar to that in Chicago, Okubo situated the re-inflatable nature of Paranirvana as a cyclical emblem of hope and rebirth, writing that it represented “life after death, death after life.”9

  • 1
    The blue sculpture is the second version. The first version was produced in tan-colored cloth, and the third was in gold.
  • 5
    deSoto, 30 June 2012.
  • 6
    Thich Nhat Hanh, The Heart of the Buddha’s Teaching: Transforming Suffering into Peace, Joy, and Liberation (New York: Broadway Books, 1998), 69.
  • 7
    deSoto, 30 June 2012.
  • 8
    “Loyola University Museum of Art to Recognize World AIDS Day,” Loyola University Museum of Art, 2006, 20 June 2012 perma.cc/0pvgchJ2J7X.
  • 9
    “Paranirvana,” Vime, 2011, 20 June 2012 http://vimeo.com/26658875.

Image conveying the experience of viewing Paranirvana within a gallery space

En route to one of its final destinations, the entire “Missing Peace” exhibition became the subject of controversy. The Brukenthal Museum in Sibiu, Romania, received requests from Chinese officials to cancel the exhibition there. Initially it seemed that the exhibition about the teachings of the Dalai Lama would be “postponed indefinitely.”1  The organizers, however, discovered that the Brukenthal was not governed by Romania but by the Evangelical Lutheran Church. Pastor Kilian Dörr of the Lutheran Cathedral of Saint Mary overturned the decision, and the exhibition was shown at the museum and the cathedral in Sibiu.2  Paranirvana took its place inside the 700-year old gothic cathedral, fantastically next to the crypt of Mihnea cel Rău, the son of Vlad III Dracula. Michelle Townsend, an exhibition organizer, remarked that, “the ecumenical message conveyed by an inflatable Buddha reclining across the floor of a church… amplified the exhibition’s message far beyond our original expectations.”3  From her perspective, displaying a sculpture inspired by the Buddha inside a Christian church exemplified the exhibition’s desire that art contributes to global peace and understanding.

Another Buddhist-focused exhibition, “The Invisible Thread: The Buddhist Spirit in Contemporary Art” at the Newhouse Center for Contemporary Art in Staten Island, NY, featured Paranirvana. Novelist and critic Joseph McElroy brought an “outsider's long-time interest [in Buddhism]” to his experience of the show.4  He reported being immediately struck by the size of the 26-foot inflatable Buddha. The whirling fan, he said, reminded him to breathe as the sculpture was breathing.5  Also McElroy understood deSoto’s use of self-portraiture as the artist’s aspiration to his own “future moment of Buddhahood.”15  Zen monk Shunyru Suzuki, who popularized Buddhism in America and opened the first Buddhist monastery outside Asia, explained that, “everyone has Buddha nature” and that “the student himself is Buddha.”16  deSoto further clarifies that, “Buddha is not an idol…Buddha is not a god. Buddha is a person. He is an enlightened person.”17  By placing his face on Buddha, deSoto is visualizing his own Buddha nature.

Paranirvana commemorates, even embodies, a somatic event.18  The death of deSoto’s father triggered “a feeling of shock and grief…[loss] has such a physical manifestation.”19  His father’s death prompted him to contemplate his own ideal death and to create an immense living and dying self-portrait. Drawing on his studies of Buddhism, Paranirvana encapsulated the Buddhist tenets of samsara and reaching enlightenment. Its body is a shell, but it is full of breath. As its title conveys, Paranirvana takes one last breath to reach “the great liberation” then slowly deflates into a peaceful material death.

  • 1
    “The Missing Peace,” Peace X Peace, 2011, 20 June 2012 perma.cc/0jXXwSJyMrF
  • 2
    Darlene Markovich, co-founder of the “Missing Peace” exhibition, personal interview, 23 August 2012.
  • 3
    “The Missing Peace.”
  • 4
    Joseph McElroy, “A Poetry of Transience,” Shambala Sun, March 2004, 1 July 2012 perma.cc/07jsd5naQC8.
  • 5
    Ibid.
  • 15
    Ibid.
  • 16
    Shunryu Suzuki, Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind (New York: Weatherhill, 1999), 137, 77.
  • 17
    Kyle MacMillan, “Inflatable Buddha (with goatee) transcends traditional sculpture,” Denver Post 15 August 2003: FF01.
  • 18
    deSoto, 30 June 2012.
  • 19
    MacMillan, “Inflatable Buddha.”

Notes

    Imprint

    Author Anya Montiel
    Year 2013
    Type Essays
    Volume Conversations: An Online Journal of the Center for the Study of Material and Visual Cultures of Religion
    Copyright © Anya Montiel
    Downloads PDF
    DOI

    10.22332/con.ess.2014.3

    Citation Guide

    1. Anya Montiel, "Art That Breathes: Lewis deSoto’s Paranirvana (self-portrait)," Essay, in Conversations: An Online Journal of the Center for the Study of Material and Visual Cultures of Religion (2014), doi:10.22332/con.ess.2014.3

    Montiel, Anya. "Art That Breathes: Lewis deSoto’s Paranirvana (self-portrait)." Essay. In Conversations: An Online Journal of the Center for the Study of Material and Visual Cultures of Religion (2014). doi:10.22332/con.ess.2014.3