A GILT BRONZE FIGURE OF THE FIFTH SHAMAR, KONCHOK YENLAK (1525-1583)
THE PROPERTY OF A DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN
西藏 十六世紀 鎏金銅第五世夏瑪巴貢曲廷拉 (1525年至1583年)像

TIBET, 16TH CENTURY

細節
西藏 十六世紀 鎏金銅第五世夏瑪巴貢曲廷拉 (1525年至1583年)像
5 ¾ in. (14.8 cm.) high
來源
Christie's New York, 27 March 2003, lot 81.
出版
Himalayan Art Resource (himalayanart.org), item no. 24390

拍品專文

Rendered with exceptional sensitivity, this portrait sculpture faithfully depicts the Fifth Shamar, Konchock Yenlak. Identified by his long narrow face with high cheekbones and a tall red hat with upturned brims, the Fifth Shamar was a principle figure in the Karma Kagyu Tradition of Tibetan Buddhism. Shown in deep meditation, he is seated atop a square cushion with his hands held over his knees in the double-gesture of bhumisparshamudra. Voluminous robes, the hems of which have been delicately incised with floral motifs, envelope his slender form. This lifelike portrait can be compared with a painting of the esteemed throne-holder published in David Jackson’s Patron and Painter: Situ Panchen and the Revival of the Encampment Style (Rubin Museum of Art, 2009, fig. 5.3). A seventeenth-century sculpture of the Ninth Karmapa of similar quality can be found in the Rubin Museum of Art (RMA acc. # C2002.15.1; HAR 65099).

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