A GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF ROLPE DORJE
A GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF ROLPE DORJE
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PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE ASIAN COLLECTION SOLD TO BENEFIT MENTAL HEALTH CHARITIES IN ASIA
A GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF ROLPE DORJE

INCISED QIANLONG WUXU CYCLICAL MARK CORRESPONDING TO 1778 AND OF THE PERIOD

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A GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF ROLPE DORJE
INCISED QIANLONG WUXU CYCLICAL MARK CORRESPONDING TO 1778 AND OF THE PERIOD
The Lama is seated in dhyanasana on a double-lotus base, wearing a monastic robe with incised foliate hem, his right hand in vitarkamudra, and the left palm facing upwards holding a separately cast kalasa, his face showing a benevolent expression with a small congenital protrusion to the lower right cheek. By each of his arms is a lotus stem, with a sword emerging from the flower on the right side, and a book on his left. The back of the base is incised with an eleven-syllable Tibetan line rendered in Uchen script transliterated as skyabs mgon lcang skya rol bai rdor je la na ma, ‘Pay Homage to Supreme Protector Changkya Rolpe Dorje’, above an eight-character Qianlong wuxu cyclical presentation mark.
6 5/8 in. (16.5 cm.), box
Provenance
A Swedish private collection
Sold at Nagel, 17 May 2008, lot 129

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Priscilla Kong
Priscilla Kong

Lot Essay

Rolpe Dorje (1717-1786) was the Third Changkya Hutuktu of the Gelugpa sect, and the principal Tibetan Buddhist teacher in the Qianlong Court. A learned scholar fluent in Chinese, Mongolian, Manchu and Tibetan, he oversaw the translation of the Kangyur into Manchu and Tibetan. Compare a gilt-bronze figure of Rolpe Dorje seated on a square cushion with hands held in the same mudra but missing the kalasa in the Capital Museum, Beijing (fig. 1). Refer also to a painted thangka of Rolpe Dorje in the Palace Museum, Beijing, commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor in 1787 where the Lama is shown holding the same mudra with a white kalasa in his left palm.

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