A GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF VAJRAPANI
A GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF VAJRAPANI
A GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF VAJRAPANI
A GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF VAJRAPANI
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PROPERTY OF THE VIRGINIA MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, SOLD TO BENEFIT FUTURE ACQUISITIONS
A GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF VAJRAPANI

TIBET, 14TH-15TH CENTURY

Details
A GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF VAJRAPANI
TIBET, 14TH-15TH CENTURY
5 1/8 in. (13 cm.) high
Provenance
Nasli and Alice Heeramaneck Collection, New York, before 1968.
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, accessioned in 1968 (acc. no. 68.8.34).
Literature
Himalayan Art Resources, item no. 24665.

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Tristan Bruck
Tristan Bruck Specialist, Head of Sale

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Lot Essay

The wrathful or yidam tutelary deity stands in a powerful lunge, or alidhasana. His face is modeled in a fierce expression, with sharp fangs, wide eyes, and fiery orange hair. His right hand brandishes a vajra, the left in tarjanimudra, as his arms are decorated with snake ornaments and his waist a tiger pelt. Vajrapani, originally a peaceful bodhisattva in the Mahayana tradition (see lot 407), has a wrathful manifestation within the Tantric or Vajrayana Buddhist tradition.
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