STATUE DE LUOHAN EN BRONZE LAQUE OR
STATUE DE LUOHAN EN BRONZE LAQUE OR
STATUE DE LUOHAN EN BRONZE LAQUE OR
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STATUE DE LUOHAN EN BRONZE LAQUE OR
7 More
This item will be transferred to an offsite wareho… Read more PROPERTY FROM GALERIE DUCHANGE, PARIS
STATUE DE LUOHAN EN BRONZE LAQUE OR

CHINE, DEBUT DE LA DYNASTIE MING, XVEME SIECLE

Details
STATUE DE LUOHAN EN BRONZE LAQUE OR
CHINE, DEBUT DE LA DYNASTIE MING, XVEME SIECLE
Il est représenté assis vêtu d'une longue robe monastique. Le crâne rasé, le visage serein aux traits individualisés est encadré de longs lobes d'oreilles. Ses deux mains sont levées en vitarkamudra.
Hauteur: 61 cm. (24 in.)
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
A GILT-LACQUERED BRONZE FIGURE OF A SEATED LUOHAN
CHINA, EARLY MING DYNASTY, 15TH CENTURY

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Tiphaine Nicoul
Tiphaine Nicoul Head of department

Lot Essay

Luohan, also known as Arhats or 'Destroyers of the Passions', vary in numbers between 16 and 108 and were depicted in Chinese art from the Tang dynasty onwards. As Buddha’s apostles, Luohan were first mentioned as sixteen Arhats in the Mahayanavataraka which was translated into Chinese in AD 437. A full transcript of these sixteen names was given in AD 653 by the pilgrim monk Xuan Zang with the additional two that were probably adopted by the end of the 10th century, these being the Arhats who tamed the Dragon and the Tiger representing Eastern and Western directions respectively.
They are usually treated as a form of portraiture in which individual features and personality traits are highlighted.

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