AN IMPORTANT AND VERY RARE GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF AVALOKITESVARA
THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN 
AN IMPORTANT AND VERY RARE GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF AVALOKITESVARA

SONG DYNASTY (960-1279)

細節
宋 鎏金銅觀音菩薩立像

此尊觀音菩薩像源自日本新田集藏,1987年在臺北國立故宮博物院《金銅佛造像特展》中展出,並著錄於展覽目錄圖版139號。
來源
The Nitta Collection, Japan
展覽
National Palace Museum, The Crucible of Compassion and Wisdom, Exhibition of Buddhist Bronzes from the Nitta Group Collection, Taipei, 1987, illustrated in the Catalogue pl. 139

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拍品專文

Originally described as Korean and dated to the Koryo period, following the 1987 exhibition, the present figure was later deemed to be Chinese and dated to the Song dynasty on account of the very distinctive stylistic features of the headdress, facial expression and robes found only on Chinese figures of this period.

The question over the origin of this figure arises because gilt-bronze figures dating to the Song dynasty are extremely rare and few related examples have been published. A gilt-bronze figure of the Watermoon Guanyin dating to the Song dynasty displaying very similar facial features and with the same treatment of the belt tying the robes at the waist in the Cleveland Museum of Art is illustrated in Hai-Wai Yi-Chen, Buddhist Sculpture, vol. 2, Taipei, 1986, pl. 149. Compare the facial expression and relatively flattened casting of the robes with those found on another figure of Avalokitesvara dated to the 10th/11th century sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 3 November 1998, lot 1011. Compare, also, a related seated bronze Maitreya Bodhisattva in the British Museum dated to the 11th century, included in the exhibition Buddhism Art and Faith at the British Museum, London, 1985 and illustrated in the Catalogue, p. 204, no. 294. Another, larger Bodhisattva dated to the Song dynasty with similarly rendered facial expression and robes in the Shanghai Museum Collection is illustrated in Ancient Chinese Sculpture Gallery, The Shanghai Museum, Shanghai, 1996, pl. 69.

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