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A RARE AND LARGE ANDESITE TORSO OF BUDDHA AMITABHA, CENTRAL JAVANESE PERIOD, SHAILENDRA DYNASTY
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2023年12月13日 开拍
拍品描述
A RARE AND LARGE ANDESITE TORSO OF BUDDHA AMITABHA, CENTRAL JAVANESE PERIOD, SHAILENDRA DYNASTY

Exhibited: The Asian Sculptor’s Eye, The Rotunda, Hong Kong, 21 August 1995

Java, circa 9th century. Powerfully carved seated in dhyanasana, his hands lowered in dhyanamudra, dressed in a sheer sanghati elegantly draped over the left shoulder and gathered in folds under the ankles.

Provenance: Ha Tuc Can, The Sculpture Gallery, Hong Kong, before 1990. The Roger Moss Collection, acquired from the above, for the equivalent of EUR 17,000, and thence by descent to Hugh Moss. Ha Tuc Can came from a privileged Vietnamese noble family. However, the ravages of war left his family bankrupt and stripped them of their wealth. In the early 1960s, he embarked on a career as a war correspondent and cameraman for CBS. During this time, he forged a close friendship with Morley Safer. In his later years, Ha Tuc Can gained recognition as a filmmaker and antiquarian. He authored several books on Vietnamese arts and participated in joint exhibitions with Jean-Michel Beurdeley in Paris. In the late 1970s, he started a business called The Sculpture Garden in Hong Kong. C. Roger Moss, OBE (1936-2020) grew up in Yorkshire and was a lifelong collector of art, best known for his collection of Chinese sculpture dating to the Tang dynasty and earlier. He was a Finance Director at British Airways when the Concorde was launched, then became the CFO of MTR in Hong Kong. During this time he also served as the president of the Oriental Ceramic Society.
Condition: Fully commensurate with age, extensive weathering and erosion, encrustations, and losses.

Weight: 86 kg
Dimensions: Height 61 cm

The drapery of the robe as well as the manner of carving of the hands and feet is consistent with central Javanese period images of Buddha from temple sites. The purpose of these images of Buddhas is to represent the stages of the path to enlightenment in Buddhist cosmology. As visitors to temples ascend through the different levels, they are guided through the process on a symbolic journey from the realm of desire to the realm of form and finally to the realm of formlessness, ultimately reaching enlightenment at the summit.

The present statue is almost certainly from Borobudur or a related temple site, such as Sewu or Plaosan in Central Java. Built by the Shailendra dynasty around 825 CE, Borobudur is one of the greatest Buddhist monuments of all time, having one of the largest and most complete ensembles of Buddhist narrative relief panels in the world. Structured as a mandala of stacked platforms representing the three planes of existence in Mahayana cosmology (the world of desire, the world of forms, and the world of formlessness), Borobodur invites pilgrims circumambulating its didactic panels and sculpture to shuck the trappings of their perceived reality and realize their true inherent formlessness.

Literature comparison:
Compare a closely related statue of Buddha Amitabha, dated first half of the 9th century, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, accession number 1995.256. Note the identical posture, especially with regards to the arms, folds of the robes, concave nature of the soles of the feet, and the treatment of the folded hands.

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价格信息

拍品估价:2,000 - 4,000 欧元 起拍价格:2,000 欧元  买家佣金:

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