A mottled red sandstone figure of a male deity
A mottled red sandstone figure of a male deity

INDIA, UTTAR PRADESH, MATHURA, KUSHAN PERIOD, 2ND CENTURY

Details
A mottled red sandstone figure of a male deity
India, Uttar Pradesh, Mathura, Kushan period, 2nd century
The torso beautifully modeled and adorned with a strap necklace, the thin drapery revealing his swelling thighs and gathered between his legs, a thick twisted sash around the hips and held by one jeweled hand
18¾ in. (47.6 cm.) high
Provenance
Acquired from Spink & Son, Ltd., London, May 1988

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

Bodhisattva figures in the Mathura school have a somewhat different function than they do in Gandhara, initially being deities attending Buddha and often depicted as worshippers or bearing a fly whisk, as possible in the present example. The sensitive modeling of the body shows the coming of the Gupta age, displaying the quality of inner breath (prana) and graceful elegance. The powerful vigor and robustness of Kushana sculpture is gradually transformed by emerging Gupta aesthetics that conceive the image as a composite of physical perfection; compare with a figure of a Bodhisattva at the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, and a figure of Nagaraja at the Cleveland Museum of Art, see S. Czuma, Kusana Sculpture: Images from Early India, 1985, p. 74f. and 88f., cat. nos. 17 and 27.

More from Indian and Southeast Asian Art

View All
View All