A GRANITE PILLAR WITH A YAKSHA AND SNAKES
A GRANITE PILLAR WITH A YAKSHA AND SNAKES
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PROPERTY FROM THE JAMES AND MARILYNN ALSDORF COLLECTION
印度南部 卡納塔克邦 十三/十四世紀 花崗岩雕夜叉那伽紋柱

SOUTH INDIA, KARNATAKA, 13TH-14TH CENTURY

細節
印度南部 卡納塔克邦 十三/十四世紀 花崗岩雕夜叉那伽紋柱
40 in. (101.6 cm.) high
來源
佳士得倫敦,1981年10月29日,拍品編號309。
詹姆斯及瑪麗蓮·阿爾斯多夫伉儷珍藏,芝加哥。
出版
P. Pal,《A Collecting Odyssey: Indian, Himalayan, and Southeast Asian Art from the James and Marilynn Alsdorf Collection》,芝加哥,1997年,頁269,圖錄編號367。
展覽
芝加哥藝術博物館, A Collecting Odyssey: Indian, Himalayan, and Southeast Asian Art from the James and Marilynn Alsdorf Collection,1997年8月2日至10月26日,編號367。

拍品專文


Following the fall of the Chola empire, later schools under the Hoysalas rejected the restraint and simplicity of their predecessors, adopting a more ornate approach to their sculptures. Both the nobility and affluent citizenry of the Hoysala kingdom were generous patrons of the arts, and many of their temples are among the most luxuriant ornate stone structures on the subcontinent. The sculpture of this period was defined by exuberant ornamentation, incorporating decorative motifs and designs to frame the representation of deities.
The veneration of serpents is still prevalent in India and works such as the present lot are found commonly among the sculpture of Karnataka, where the motif was particularly popular. While serpents were worshipped for protection from their deadly bite, they were also implored for prosperity and progeny. The reptiles here are not rendered in their naturalistic form but rather used to adorn the sides of the pillar, taking the form of the exaggerated ornamentation that was characteristic of this period.

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