- Master Koun Seki leads a Guild of young sculptors struggling to excel in the art of Buddhist woodcarving, and preserve their awe-inspiring, 1,400 year tradition in a rapidly changing Japan.
- Carving the Divine offers a rare and intimate look into the life and artistic process of modern-day Busshi - practitioners of a 1400 year lineage of Buddhist woodcarving. Determined to pass his craft down to future generations, Master Koun Seki, the former apprentice of renowned Busshi, Kourin Saito, interviews a candidate applying to be his new apprentice. Quickly though, we discover this apprenticeship and the Busshi's life to be far less glamorous, and much more austere, than we (or the Candidate) would've likely imagined. Once Master Seki makes his selection, we're taken on a trip through a guild culture unlike anything existing today in The West: From the growing pains of a novice apprentice, to the entire guild working together as one body to create breathtaking works of art, to the monkish practice of the famed, Grand Master Saito himself, alone on his quest to "leave nothing but great works behind." What's more, we're granted unprecedented access into the secret rites of Shingon (True Word) Buddhism. And faced with the devastation of the Tohoku Tsunami, we're given profound insight into the Busshi's significance within the Japanese psyche, and the nature of human perseverance through suffering.
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