A RARE INLAID GILT-BRONZE INSCRIBED FIGURE OF ELEVEN-HEADED AVALOKITESVARA
A RARE INLAID GILT-BRONZE INSCRIBED FIGURE OF ELEVEN-HEADED AVALOKITESVARA
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A RARE INLAID GILT-BRONZE INSCRIBED FIGURE OF ELEVEN-HEADED AVALOKITESVARA

DATED KANGXI CYCLICAL XINWEI YEAR, CORRESPONDING TO 1691 AND OF THE PERIOD

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A RARE INLAID GILT-BRONZE INSCRIBED FIGURE OF ELEVEN-HEADED AVALOKITESVARA
DATED KANGXI CYCLICAL XINWEI YEAR, CORRESPONDING TO 1691 AND OF THE PERIOD
The figure is well cast with twenty-four arms and eleven heads, with two pairs of arms aross the front, the lower pair held together, the upper pair in anjali mudra, with eighteen radiating arms holding various attributes, and the final pair of arms extending above the heads holding the Amitabha Buddha seated on a lotus base, all above a lotus base with an incised inscription on the reverse containing the date of commission, the eighth month of Kangxi xinwei year, and the name of the commissioner, Lady Gao of the Jin family.
19 3/8 in. (49.3 cm.) high

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Stephenie Tsoi
Stephenie Tsoi

Lot Essay

The eleven-headed form of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara was highly revered from the late Ming dynasty through the Qing dynasty. The current figure is a superb and rare example of this deity rendered in gilt bronze from the Kangxi period, showing a continuation in style from its Yuan and Ming predecessors.

Compare with related eleven-headed, multi-armed figures of Avalokitesvara of the Ming period, all shown seated, one represented with thousand-arms from the Fuller Memorial Collection in the Seattle Art Museum, illustrated by H. Munsterberg, Chinese Buddhist Bronzes, 1967, no. 72; and a twenty-four-armed figure in bronze, sold at Sotheby’s New York, 16 September 2009, lot 129 (fig .1). Compare also to a fourty-eight-armed figure dated to the Qing dynasty in the Staatliche Museen Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Ethnologisches Museum, museum number: 37174; and a seven-headed twenty-four-armed giltbronze figure dated to 16th-17th century in the Chang Foundation, illustrated by James Spencer, Buddhist Images in Gilt Metal, Taipei, 1993, pp. 86-87, no. 36.

According to the inscription incised on the back side of the lotus base, the present figure was commissioned by Lady Gao of the Jin family, which may have been the family of Jin Fu (1633-1692), who was an important Kangxi-period official noted for his accomplishment in river engineering.

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