Also abbreviated to kaigen or kaigan 開眼, jugan, or jugen 入眼. Lit. eye-opening ceremony. A ceremony to consecrate a newly made Buddhist image in which an officiating priest paints in the pupils of the eyes of the Buddha. It is believed that the soul enters the statue or painting. The image is thus passed symbolically from the hands of the artist to the temple. The priest who paints in the dot of the pupil is called the kaigenshi 開眼師. The ceremony usually takes place when the statue or painting is installed in the temple after all other decoration is completed. A famous example of kaigen kuyō is known as daibutsu kaigen kuyō 大仏開眼供養 or daibutsu kaigen 大仏開眼, the consecration ceremony for the Great Buddha of Nara (see *daibutsu 大仏), in 752. It was the first kaigen kuyō ceremony held in Japan, and some of the masks, costumes, and utensils used, including the brush for the eye-opening, are preserved in Nara's *Shōsōin 正倉院. The ceremony was attended by the Emperor Shōmu 聖武, the Empress Kōmyō 光明, and other officials. Monks assembled from all around the country to chant the sutra, and the kaigenshi (officiating priest) was a Brahman priest from India. The daibutsu kaigen kuyō is recorded to have been a magnificent event, with Emperor Kōken 孝謙 and previous retired emperors also in attendance, as well as many experts in all branches of the arts and military.