DEUX STATUES DE BODHISATTVA EN BOIS POLYCHROME
DEUX STATUES DE BODHISATTVA EN BOIS POLYCHROME
DEUX STATUES DE BODHISATTVA EN BOIS POLYCHROME
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DEUX STATUES DE BODHISATTVA EN BOIS POLYCHROME
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This item will be transferred to an offsite wareho… Read more Property from a European private collection
DEUX STATUES DE BODHISATTVA EN BOIS POLYCHROME

CHINE, DYNASTIE SONG (960-1279)

Details
DEUX STATUES DE BODHISATTVA EN BOIS POLYCHROME
CHINE, DYNASTIE SONG (960-1279)
Ils sont représentés debout, l'une tournant sa tête vers la droite et l'autre vers la gauche. Ils sont vêtus de longues robes superposées formant un élégant plissé. Leur buste partiellement découvert est paré de bijoux. Leurs cheveux noirs sont relevés en un chignon haut souligné d'un ornement. Leur expression est sereine ; manques.

The dating is consistent with the Institut royal du patrimoine artistique, Brussels, Radiocarbon dating report no. RICH-26490, 2018.
Hauteur : 72 cm. (28 3/8 in.) et 75 cm. (29 1/2 in.)
Provenance
Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 7-8 December 1931, lot 123.
Special notice
This item will be transferred to an offsite warehouse after the sale. Please refer to department for information about storage charges and collection details.
Further details
TWO POLYCHROME WOOD FIGURES OF BODHISATTVAS
CHINA, SONG DYNASTY (960-1279)

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Tiphaine Nicoul
Tiphaine Nicoul Head of department

Lot Essay

These two magnificent wood sculptures represent bodhisattvas, the enlightened deities of Buddhism. Although the identifying attributes signified by the hand gestures are missing, they would likely have formed part of a larger group of figures in the retinue of a Buddha. Such arrangements exist as early as the Tang dynasty (618 – 906), They remained represented in the Chinese Buddhist pantheon up through the Ming dynasty (1368 – 1644), such as the Tang dynasty example illustrated by H. Trubner et. al., Asiatic Art in the Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, Washington, 1973, p. 154, no. 101. Stylistically, the heavy folds of the robes, obscuring the features of the body, and the fleshy jowls of the face, represent a continuation of an earlier Song dynasty (960 – 1279) style. Compare to a larger wood figure of a standing bodhisattva, dated Northern Song dynasty, in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of New York (Accession Number: 28.123).

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