IMPORTANTE STATUE DE GARDIEN EN GRES
IMPORTANTE STATUE DE GARDIEN EN GRES

CAMBODGE, KHMER, STYLE DE KOH KER, MILIEU DU XEME SIECLE

Details
IMPORTANTE STATUE DE GARDIEN EN GRES
CAMBODGE, KHMER, STYLE DE KOH KER, MILIEU DU XEME SIECLE
Représenté à genoux sur une base, vêtu d'un sampot plissé, tenant un vajra dans la main droite, la gauche reposant sur sa cuisse, sa tête de lion expressive, la gueule rugissant, traces de laque noire ; la cuisse et le bras droits refixés
Hauteur: 84 cm. (33 in.)
Provenance
From a German private collection
Acquired at Adrian Maynard, London, circa 1969
Further details
AN IMPORTANT SANDSTONE FIGURE OF A LION-HEADED GUARDIAN
CAMBODIA, KHMER, KOH KER STYLE, MID 10TH CENTURY

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Mathilde Courteault
Mathilde Courteault

Lot Essay

This imposing anthropomorphic kneeling guardian figure displays a human body and limbs though topped with a menacing lion head. These guardians were placed aside of gateways, steps and entrances of sacred areas like temples. His right hand holds the vajra or diamond sceptre a common attribute for these guardians. The right lower side of the figure has a different colour and follows the break of the arm and leg suggesting that this section was found in a different part of the ground and influenced by different minerals and salts than the rest of the figure.
The presented stone guardian can be compared in iconography and style with the famous and earlier example from Bantey Srei, presently in the National Museum of Cambodia, Phnom Penh (inv. no. Ka 786) and published for instance by H. I. Jessup and Th. Zéphir, Angkor et dix siècles d'Art Khmer, Réunion des Musées Nationaux, Paris 1997, pl. 52.

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