A RARE WHITE MARBLE FIGURE OF A MONK
A RARE WHITE MARBLE FIGURE OF A MONK
A RARE WHITE MARBLE FIGURE OF A MONK
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A RARE WHITE MARBLE FIGURE OF A MONK
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Another Property
唐/宋 石雕僧人立像

TANG-SONG DYNASTY (618-1279)

細節
唐/宋 石雕僧人立像
23 ½ in. (59.7 cm.), composite base
來源
盧芹齋,紐約,1940年前
Frank Caro,紐約,1964年
亞瑟 M. 塞克勒珍藏中國藝術;紐約佳士得,2009年3月18日,拍品編號356
出版
盧芹齋,「An Exhibition of Chinese Stone Sculptures」,紐約,1940年,編號43
盧芹齋,「Exhibition of Chinese Arts」,紐約,1941年,編號941
展覽
紐約,盧芹齋,「An Exhibition of Chinese Stone Sculptures」,1940年
紐約,盧芹齋,「Exhibition of Chinese Arts」,1941年11月1日至1942年4月30日
紐約,哥倫比亞大學 Low Memorial圖書館,「The Columbia University Exhibition of Three Thousand Years of the Ceramic Art and Ancient Sculpture of China from the Sackler Collections」,1962年11月11日至1963年6月18日,編號S-20
借展:普林斯頓大學藝術博物館,1969年至2008年10月,編號L.1969.80

榮譽呈獻

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

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拍品專文

This serene marble figure of a monk likely depicts Buddha’s disciple Kasyapa, who together with Ananda, is often portrayed flanking images of Buddha. Kasyapa is generally shown as more elderly, with his hands held together at the chest like the present figure, and Ananda is depicted as a youth, with the hands clasped in front of him. The present figure carries a rectangular object, probably a sutra, as Kasyapa was traditionally believed to have been responsible for the first Chinese translation of 'The Scripture in Forty-two Sections', Sishi'er zhang jing, an Indian Buddhist text which he and two other monks brought to China in the Eastern Han dynasty.

Related marble figures, of similar and larger sizes than the present figure, have been dated from the Tang to the Song dynasty. Two much larger figures of Kasyapa and Ananda (175 cm. and 157 cm.) in the Shanghai Museum, with Kasyapa featuring similar facial features and hand placement to the present figure, dated to the Song dynasty, are illustrated in Ancient Chinese Sculpture Gallery, The Shanghai Museum, Shanghai, 1996, nos. 65-66. The manner of carving seen on the loosely draped robes on the Shanghai examples is also quite similar to that on the present figure, as are the carved lotus bases.

Two related figures of Kasyapa and Ananda, slightly larger (87 cm. and 82 cm.) than the present example, dated AD 752, with small facial features, although clad in slightly more elaborate robes standing on an open lotus flower, are in the Foguang Monastery, and illustrated by J. Li in Essence of Buddhistic Statues, Beijing, 1996, p. 152, no. 132. A related marble figure with the hands held in front of him and with similar facial features and robe to the present figure, although much larger (169.9 cm.), dated to the Tang dynasty, is in the Royal Ontario Museum, Canada, and illustrated in Comprehensive Illustrated Catalogue of Chinese Buddhist Statues in Overseas Collections, vol. 6, Beijing, 2005, p. 1135.

This rare and sensitively carved sculpture has an impressive record of provenance and exhibition, dating back to 1940. (Fig. 1) Exhibited twice by C. T. Loo, the sculpture is also featured in a rare photograph of the famous dealer, now in the National Portrait Gallery, Washington, D.C. (Fig. 2) If viewing these illustrations online please refer to additional images 6-8.

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