PAIRE DE DAIMS EN CUIVRE REPOUSSE
PAIRE DE DAIMS EN CUIVRE REPOUSSE

TIBETO-CHINOIS, XIXEME SIECLE

Details
PAIRE DE DAIMS EN CUIVRE REPOUSSE
TIBETO-CHINOIS, XIXEME SIECLE
Représentant un couple de daims chacun couché sur une base lotiforme, leurs pattes repliées sous leur corps, leur tête dressée vers le ciel, leurs yeux ronds ouverts, leur gueule fermée. Le front du mâle rehaussé d'une corne ; petits accidents.
Hauteurs: 96 cm. (37¾ in.) et 97,5 cm. (38 3/8 in.), Longueur: circa 88 cm. 34 5/8 in.) (2)
Further details
A PAIR OF COPPER REPOUSSE RECUMBENT DEERS
TIBETO-CHINESE, 19TH CENTURY

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Quitterie Marcellin
Quitterie Marcellin

Lot Essay

The deer, one male and female, with their attentive demeanor, symbolize the audience of Shakyamuni Buddha's first teaching at the deer park of Sarnath after attaining enlightenment. He preached the eight-fold path towards liberation from the suffering of unenlightened life. The deer would have flanked an eight-spoked wheel of Dharma, symbolizing the Buddhist teaching or 'Turning of the Wheel', and are generally placed above the front gate of a Buddhist monastery, allowing for the path toward liberation and happiness to progress.
For another pair, see R. Thurman and D. Weldon, Sacred Symbols, The Ritual Art of Tibet, 1999, cat. no. 1.
See a comparable pair sold by Christie's New york, 21 March 2007, lot 341.

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