A VERY RARE MASSIVE PAINTED STUCCO HEAD OF A BODHISATTVA
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A VERY RARE MASSIVE PAINTED STUCCO HEAD OF A BODHISATTVA

MING DYNASTY, 16TH CENTURY

细节
38 ½ in. (97.8 cm.) high, black metal base
出版
Kaikodo Journal, New York, Spring 2000, pp. 228-9, no. 75.
展览
New York, Kaikodo, Realms of Faith, 18 March-15 April 2000.
拍场告示
Please note this lot will be offered without a reserve.
請注意這件拍品無底價

荣誉呈献

Rufus Chen (陳嘉安)
Rufus Chen (陳嘉安) Head of Sale, AVP, Specialist

拍品专文

This monumental head of a bodhisattva was made with clay and lime combined with a binding material applied over a wood core, and was then colored with mineral pigments. The ease of working with these materials allowed artisans to create larger-scale sculptural works such as this magnificent head.

Buddhist stucco figures were popular from the Tang dynasty onwards, and many spectacular examples have been found in temples in Shanxi province, known for its vast quantity of Buddhist monasteries. Compare a Tang dynasty stucco bodhisattva illustrated in Shanxi foujiao caisu (Buddhist Sculpture of Shanxi Province), Beijing, 1991, pl. 1. The present bodhisattva head relates to these earlier Tang prototypes in the rendering of the hair and elaborate crown, and finely-modeled features.

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