A SANDSTONE TORSO OF VISHNU
A SANDSTONE TORSO OF VISHNU

KHMER, ANGKOR BOREI PERIOD, 8TH/9TH CENTURY

Details
A SANDSTONE TORSO OF VISHNU
KHMER, ANGKOR BOREI PERIOD, 8TH/9TH CENTURY
Finely carved wearing a short sampot knotted at the waist, standing frontally with squared shoulders and hips, the stone finely polished
16 in. (40.6 cm.) high
Provenance
Willy W. Wolff, Inc., New York
Collection of Robert and Bernice Dickes, acquired from above 19 March 1984
Exhibited
C. Rochell, Indian and Southeast Asian Art: Selections from the Robert and Bernice Dickes Collection, New York, 2010

Brought to you by

Leiko Coyle
Leiko Coyle

Lot Essay

Exhibiting the lyricism and grace that characterizes the treatment of the body in Gupta-period India, art of the Pre-Angkor period minimizes ornamentation in order to emphasize the smooth contours of the form, thereby enhancing the figure’s sensuality in an innovative visual vocabulary. Gracefully and powerfully positioned in a frontal stance, the figure wears a simple and unpleated sampot typical of Pre-Angkor sculpture. The body is poised and appears ready to move, the chest bared and tapering towards a belly that gently rises with the intake of prana, the sacred life-breath. During the Pre-Angkor period, experimentations with art and iconography produced figures of deities imbued with an energy that would continue to reverberate throughout the duration of the Khmer empire.

More from Indian, Himalayan and Southeast Asian Works of Art

View All
View All