A BRONZE HEAD OF BUDDHA
A BRONZE HEAD OF BUDDHA
A BRONZE HEAD OF BUDDHA
A BRONZE HEAD OF BUDDHA
3 More
PROPERTY FROM A PROMINENT EAST COAST COLLECTION
A BRONZE HEAD OF BUDDHA

THAILAND, AYUTTHAYA PERIOD, 14TH-15TH CENTURY

Details
A BRONZE HEAD OF BUDDHA
THAILAND, AYUTTHAYA PERIOD, 14TH-15TH CENTURY
6 ¼ in. (15.9 cm.) high
Provenance
Collection of Alfred E. Mirsky, New York, by 1974.
Rockefeller University, by 1978 (acc. no. 78-107).
Christie's New York, 30 March 2006, lot 108.

Lot Essay


During the fourteenth through sixteenth centuries, Thailand's Ayutthaya kingdom became one of the most powerful forces on mainland Southeast Asia. Continuing the artistic trajectory set forth under the Sukhothai, the Theravada polity sponsored the production of Buddha images fashioned in a new distinct style. The faces display a curvilinear contour with the hairline extending towards the sinuous browline accentuated by elongated ears flared at the upper and lower tips. The eyes, extending evenly across the width of the face, are three-quarters closed to endow the figure with a sense of serenity that is at once inwardly directed and also engaged with the world.

More from Indian, Himalayan & Southeast Asian Works of Art

View All
View All