編號 100825516

無法使用
健馱邏國 粉刷 菩萨头部。公元2至4世纪。高31.5厘米。西班牙进口许可证。
競投已結束
一週前

健馱邏國 粉刷 菩萨头部。公元2至4世纪。高31.5厘米。西班牙进口许可证。

Head of a Bodhisattva. Gandhara, 2nd-4th century AD. Stucco. 31.5 cm height. PROVENANCE: - Fortuna Fine Arts, New York. - Private collection, New York, USA. Acquired from the above. CONDITION: Good state of preservation. No restorations. DESCRIPTION: Larger than life-size head, moulded in stucco almost in the round, with the back unfinished, indicating that it would have originally formed part of a high relief. Stucco was, along with stone, the preferred material for the artists of Gandhara, given its great plasticity, as it allowed for a high level of expressiveness and detail. It represents a young man in princely attire, with curly hair falling on either side of his face and a textile headdress decorated with openwork guilloches and a rosette on his left temple. It is the representation of a bodhisattva, a term that in Mahayana Buddhism identifies those who have chosen the path of Enlightenment for the benefit of all living beings. Bodhisattvas are usually represented with the clothes and ornaments of contemporary princes, in this case from the Kushan Empire (fig. 1). His iconography, however, includes the so-called lakshana, symbols that allude to his enlightened nature: the half-closed eyelids represent spiritual concentration and also purity, due to their similarity to the petals of the lotus, and the serene face with a sketched smile is a symbol of the balance and serenity of a perfect being. The elongated earlobes allude to the large earrings worn by members of the upper classes in India contemporary to Sakyamuni (the historical Buddha), and represent the concepts of greatness, nobility and wisdom. This head, originally polychrome, probably originally included more iconographic elements, such as the point between the eyebrows from which emanates the light of wisdom that illuminates all beings (fig. 2). The iconography is, therefore, clearly Buddhist, but a clear influence of Hellenistic Greek sculpture can be seen both in the sculptural language, of an idealized realism, and in certain conventions such as the elegant inclination of the head and the soft work of the volumes of the face. The details that adorn the headdress are also clearly of Greco-Latin influence, especially the guilloche, an element directly taken from the Roman ornamental repertoire. The historical region of Gandhara, which corresponds to the south-east of present-day Afghanistan, the centre and north of Pakistan and the north-west of India, was a satrapy of the Achaemenid Persian Empire from the 6th century BC until the conquest of Alexander the Great in 326 BC. However, only two years later it would be annexed to the Maurya Empire, whose emperor Ashoka the Great (304-232 BC) would introduce Buddhism to the area. Around 184 BC, Gandhara returned to Greek hands under King Demetrius, ruler of neighbouring Bactria; from then on, and until the year 10 AD, Hellenistic kings would succeed one another in the region, although Buddhism would continue to be the dominant religion. This Indo-Greek period came to an end with the conquest of Gandhara by the Kushan Empire (1st-3rd century AD), whose rulers nevertheless adopted numerous elements of Hellenistic culture, including the Greek alphabet. These historical circumstances determined the development of Greco-Buddhist art in Gandhara, a syncretism between Greek culture and Buddhism. The influence of Hellenistic sculpture, which represented the gods in human form, with an idealised realism and a heightened taste for detail, determined the creation of the first representations of the Buddha Gautama. The oldest known devotional images of Buddha were created in Gandhara between the 1st and 3rd centuries AD, and marked the end of the aniconism that had characterised early Buddhist art. Soon not only the historical Buddha, but also the other figures of the Buddhist pantheon, would be represented in human form, creating a whole figurative iconography that would support the expansion of Buddhism throughout East Asia. The Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara came to an end in the 7th century after two hundred years of rule by the White Huns, of Hindu religion, who exerted significant repression on Buddhist culture, ultimately causing its disappearance in the area. BIBLIOGRAPHY: - BANERJEE, G.N. Hellenism in Ancient India. Butterworth & Co. 1920. - BOARDMAN, J. The Diffusion of Classical Art in Antiquity. Princeton University Press. 1994. - HALLADE, M. Gandharan Art of North India and the Graeco Buddhist. Harry N. Abrams. 1968. - MARSHALL, J. The Buddhist Art of Gandhara. Cambridge University Press. 1960. - ODANI, N. Gandharan art and the Kushan dynasty. Kyoto. 1996. - STONEMAN, R. The Greek experience of India. Princeton University Press. 2019. PARALLELS: Fig. 1 Head of a bodhisattva. Gandhara, 5th century AD. Stucco, 50.2 cm high. Metropolitan Museum, New York, inv. 1977.191. Fig. 2 Bodhisattva head. Gandhara, ff. IV-V AD Polychrome stucco, 15.94 cm high. British Museum, London, inv. 1962,0421.2. Notes: - The piece includes authenticity certificate. - The piece includes Spanish Export License (Passport for European Union) - If the piece is destined outside the European Union a substitution of the export permit should be requested, can take between 1-2 weeks maximum. - The seller guarantees that he acquired this piece according to all national and international laws related to the ownership of cultural property. Provenance statement seen by Catawiki.

編號 100825516

無法使用
健馱邏國 粉刷 菩萨头部。公元2至4世纪。高31.5厘米。西班牙进口许可证。

健馱邏國 粉刷 菩萨头部。公元2至4世纪。高31.5厘米。西班牙进口许可证。

Head of a Bodhisattva.

Gandhara, 2nd-4th century AD.

Stucco.

31.5 cm height.

PROVENANCE:

- Fortuna Fine Arts, New York.
- Private collection, New York, USA. Acquired from the above.

CONDITION: Good state of preservation. No restorations.

DESCRIPTION:

Larger than life-size head, moulded in stucco almost in the round, with the back unfinished, indicating that it would have originally formed part of a high relief. Stucco was, along with stone, the preferred material for the artists of Gandhara, given its great plasticity, as it allowed for a high level of expressiveness and detail. It represents a young man in princely attire, with curly hair falling on either side of his face and a textile headdress decorated with openwork guilloches and a rosette on his left temple. It is the representation of a bodhisattva, a term that in Mahayana Buddhism identifies those who have chosen the path of Enlightenment for the benefit of all living beings. Bodhisattvas are usually represented with the clothes and ornaments of contemporary princes, in this case from the Kushan Empire (fig. 1). His iconography, however, includes the so-called lakshana, symbols that allude to his enlightened nature: the half-closed eyelids represent spiritual concentration and also purity, due to their similarity to the petals of the lotus, and the serene face with a sketched smile is a symbol of the balance and serenity of a perfect being. The elongated earlobes allude to the large earrings worn by members of the upper classes in India contemporary to Sakyamuni (the historical Buddha), and represent the concepts of greatness, nobility and wisdom. This head, originally polychrome, probably originally included more iconographic elements, such as the point between the eyebrows from which emanates the light of wisdom that illuminates all beings (fig. 2).

The iconography is, therefore, clearly Buddhist, but a clear influence of Hellenistic Greek sculpture can be seen both in the sculptural language, of an idealized realism, and in certain conventions such as the elegant inclination of the head and the soft work of the volumes of the face. The details that adorn the headdress are also clearly of Greco-Latin influence, especially the guilloche, an element directly taken from the Roman ornamental repertoire.

The historical region of Gandhara, which corresponds to the south-east of present-day Afghanistan, the centre and north of Pakistan and the north-west of India, was a satrapy of the Achaemenid Persian Empire from the 6th century BC until the conquest of Alexander the Great in 326 BC. However, only two years later it would be annexed to the Maurya Empire, whose emperor Ashoka the Great (304-232 BC) would introduce Buddhism to the area. Around 184 BC, Gandhara returned to Greek hands under King Demetrius, ruler of neighbouring Bactria; from then on, and until the year 10 AD, Hellenistic kings would succeed one another in the region, although Buddhism would continue to be the dominant religion. This Indo-Greek period came to an end with the conquest of Gandhara by the Kushan Empire (1st-3rd century AD), whose rulers nevertheless adopted numerous elements of Hellenistic culture, including the Greek alphabet.

These historical circumstances determined the development of Greco-Buddhist art in Gandhara, a syncretism between Greek culture and Buddhism. The influence of Hellenistic sculpture, which represented the gods in human form, with an idealised realism and a heightened taste for detail, determined the creation of the first representations of the Buddha Gautama. The oldest known devotional images of Buddha were created in Gandhara between the 1st and 3rd centuries AD, and marked the end of the aniconism that had characterised early Buddhist art. Soon not only the historical Buddha, but also the other figures of the Buddhist pantheon, would be represented in human form, creating a whole figurative iconography that would support the expansion of Buddhism throughout East Asia. The Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara came to an end in the 7th century after two hundred years of rule by the White Huns, of Hindu religion, who exerted significant repression on Buddhist culture, ultimately causing its disappearance in the area.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

- BANERJEE, G.N. Hellenism in Ancient India. Butterworth & Co. 1920. - BOARDMAN, J. The Diffusion of Classical Art in Antiquity. Princeton University Press. 1994. - HALLADE, M. Gandharan Art of North India and the Graeco Buddhist. Harry N. Abrams. 1968. - MARSHALL, J. The Buddhist Art of Gandhara. Cambridge University Press. 1960. - ODANI, N. Gandharan art and the Kushan dynasty. Kyoto. 1996. - STONEMAN, R. The Greek experience of India. Princeton University Press. 2019.

PARALLELS:

Fig. 1 Head of a bodhisattva. Gandhara, 5th century AD. Stucco, 50.2 cm high. Metropolitan Museum, New York, inv. 1977.191.

Fig. 2 Bodhisattva head. Gandhara, ff. IV-V AD Polychrome stucco, 15.94 cm high. British Museum, London, inv. 1962,0421.2.







Notes:

- The piece includes authenticity certificate.
- The piece includes Spanish Export License (Passport for European Union) - If the piece is destined outside the European Union a substitution of the export permit should be requested, can take between 1-2 weeks maximum.
- The seller guarantees that he acquired this piece according to all national and international laws related to the ownership of cultural property. Provenance statement seen by Catawiki.

競投已結束
Ruth Garrido Vila
專家
估價  € 20,000 - € 25,000

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