An embroidered foliate crown with five Tathagathas
An embroidered foliate crown with five Tathagathas

TIBET, 16TH CENTURY

Details
An embroidered foliate crown with five Tathagathas
Tibet, 16th century
The crown with five petals, each portraying a Buddha seated on a lotus throne with a simple gold halo surrounded by clouds, the petals lined with a netted cotton and leather
Silk face with embroidery and couched gilt-wrapped threads, mounted onto netted cotton and leather
23¼ in. (59 cm.) wide
Provenance
Private Collection in Australia

Lot Essay

This embroidered silk crown, still in excellent condition, would have been made for a Tibetan Lama. The stitch was embroidered with two needles of thread instead of one, adding to the rarity of this piece. For similar crowns see Chinese Textiles, Spink & Son, Ltd., London, 5 - 23 December, 1994, p. 47, cat. nos. 46 and 47 and Chinese and Central Asian Textiles: Selected articles from Orientations 1983 - 1997, 1998, p. 44, fig. 5.

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