A BRONZE LEOGRYPH-FORM INCENSE BURNER HANDLE
A BRONZE LEOGRYPH-FORM INCENSE BURNER HANDLE
A BRONZE LEOGRYPH-FORM INCENSE BURNER HANDLE
A BRONZE LEOGRYPH-FORM INCENSE BURNER HANDLE
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A BRONZE LEOGRYPH-FORM INCENSE BURNER HANDLE

ANCIENT REGION OF GANDHARA, 2ND CENTURY BCE-CE 2ND CENTURY

Details
A BRONZE LEOGRYPH-FORM INCENSE BURNER HANDLE
ANCIENT REGION OF GANDHARA, 2ND CENTURY BCE-CE 2ND CENTURY
Cast in the form of an outstretched leogryph, with mouth agape with fangs bared below bulging eyes, the pointed ears centered by a spiked mane leading to the diminutive wings at the shoulder, each incised with a feathered motif, and the attenuated body leading to a lug-form tail above the hind legs
7 ¼ in. (18.4 cm.) long
Provenance
Spink & Son, Ltd., London, 28 July 1983.
The James and Marilynn Alsdorf Collection, Chicago.

Lot Essay


A work of sculptural elegance in its own right, this leogryph-form handle would have been attached to a circular tray meant to catch embers, and likely would have been used in a ritual context. The elegant design and lavish use of materials speaks to the importance of ritual objects in early Buddhism in the Gandharan region during ancient times. A comparable example of an incense burner with a leogryph handle, dated to the first century A.D. and in the collection of the National Museum of Pakistan is illustrated by A. Proser in The Buddhist Heritage of Pakistan, New York, 2011, p. 89, cat. no. 3, and described by H. Ingolt in Gandharan Art in Pakistan, New York, 1957, fig. 493.

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