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A LARGE GILT-COPPER FOUR-PRONGED VAJRA, DORJE, TIBET, 17TH-18TH CENTURY
奥地利
03月07日 晚上6点 开拍
拍品描述
A LARGE GILT-COPPER FOUR-PRONGED VAJRA, DORJE, TIBET, 17TH-18TH CENTURY
This lot is a museum deaccession and is therefore offered without reserve

Boldly cast with a central compressed globular grip flanked by bands of lotus petals in relief and supporting a central column surrounded by four arched vajra points adorned with foliage and pierced to one terminal.

Provenance: The Kienzle Family Collection, Stuttgart, Germany. Acquired between 1950 and 1985 by siblings Else (1912-2006), Reinhold (1917-2008), and Dr. Horst Kienzle (1924-2019), during their extensive travels in Asia. Subsequently inherited by Dr. Horst Kienzle and bequeathed to the Museum für Asiatische Kunst, Radevormwald, Germany. Released through museum deaccession in 2024. The Kienzle siblings were avid travelers and passionate collectors of Asian and Islamic art. During their travels, the Kienzle’s sought out and explored temples, monasteries, and markets, always trying to find the best pieces wherever they went, investing large sums of money and forging lasting relationships to ensure they could acquire them. Their fervor and success in this pursuit is not only demonstrated by their collection but further recorded in correspondences between Horst Kienzle and several noted dignitaries, businesses and individuals in Nepal and Ladakh. Their collection had gained renown by the 1970s, but the Kienzle’s stopped acquiring new pieces around 1985. Almost thirty years later, the collection was moved to the Museum für Asiatische Kunst, Radevormwald, opened by Peter Hardt in 2014. Before his death in 2019, Horst Kienzle bequeathed his entire property to Peter Hardt and legally adopted him as his son, who has been using the name Peter Kienzle-Hardt ever since.
Condition: Very good condition with minor wear, traces of use, and casting irregularities including a fissure to one side of the grip. Light dents, few small nicks, expected rubbing and losses to gilt.

Weight: 690.1 g
Dimensions: Length 21 cm

The vajra, a symbol of indestructability and power, is one of the primary ritual symbols in Tibetan Buddhism. Derived from Sanskrit and translating to both thunderbolt and diamond, the vajra consists of two sets of prongs from which lotus petals emanate, flanking a central sphere. Often used in combination with a bell, which represents feminine wisdom, the vajra symbolizes the masculine attribute of skillful means or compassion.

Literature comparison:
Compare a related vajra from Central Tibet, dated circa 18th century, 12.7 cm long, in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, accession number M.2001.158.1. Compare a related bronze vajra dated 17th-18th century, 14 cm long, in the Rubin Museum of Art, object number C2008.23.

Auction result comparison:
Type: Related
Auction: Christie’s Amsterdam, 31 October 2000, lot 16
Price: NLG 7,021 or approx. EUR 5,600 converted and adjusted for inflation at the time of writing
Description: A Tibetan bronze vajra, 16th-17th century
Expert remark: Compare the related form and manner of casting. Note the size (29 cm).

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拍品估价:1,000 - 2,000 欧元 起拍价格:500 欧元  买家佣金: 35.00%

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