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453
                                                                       A RED SANDSTONE HEAD OF A DIVINITY
                                                                       INDIA, WESTERN RAJASTHAN, 12TH-13TH CENTURY
                                                                       11Ω in. (29.2 in.) high
                                                                       $6,000-8,000
                                                                       PROVENANCE:
                                                                       Sotheby's New York, 21 September 1995, lot 244.
                                                                       The Ismail Merchant Collection; Christie's South Kensington,
                                                                       7 October 2009, lot 168.



                                                                       THE PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE NEW YORK COLLECTOR
                                                                       454
                                                                       A BUFF SANDSTONE RELIEF OF NARASIMHA
                                                                       INDIA, UTTAR PRADESH, 10TH-11TH CENTURY
                                                                       18 in. (45.7 cm.) high
                                                                       $15,000-20,000
                                                                       PROVENANCE:
                                                                       Christie's New York, 17 September 1999, lot 39.
                                                                       This  crisply-carved  sandstone  stele  captures  the  scene  as
                                                                       Vishnu transforms into his half-man, half-lion avatar, Narasimha,
                                                                       in order to vanquish the demon-king Hiranyakshipu. Vishnu, in
                                                                       the  form  of  his  boar-avatar,  Varaha,  had  recently  killed  the
                                                                       demon-king’s brother, Hiranyaksha. To prepare for vengeance,
                                                                       Hiranyakshipu  enlisted  the  help  of  the  god  Brahma,  who
                                                                       granted the king the power to not be killed by neither man nor
                                                                       animal, inside nor outside, at day nor night, on ground nor sky,
                                                                       and by weapons animate nor inanimate.
                                                                       Later, at dusk (neither day nor night), Hiranyakshipu discovers
                                                                       that his son, Prahlad, had become a recent devotee of Vishnu
                                                                       and advances to kill him out of anger. Suddenly, Vishnu, in the
                                                                       form  of  Narasimha  (neither  man  nor  animal)  lunges  from  a
                                                                       pillar (neither inside nor outside), props the demon king on his
                                                                       knee (neither ground nor sky) and disembowels him with his
                                                                       claws (weapons neither animate nor inanimate). This precise
                                                                       moment  is  depicted  in  the  present  stele,  with  Narasimha
                                                                       fiercely  pulling  opposite  ends  of  his  mane  as  he  defeats
                                                                       the  hubristic  king.  Donor  figures,  one  likely  representing
                                                                       Prahlad, sit at his feet. Mythical vyala mounted upon diminutive
                                                                       elephants frame the lively scene, along with more seated and
                                                                       standing attendant figures.
                                                                       Representations  of  Narasimha  in  northern  and  central  India
                                                                       reveal  that  this  avatar  of  Vishnu  was  worshiped  in  both
                                                                       zoomorphic  and  anthropomorphic  forms  since  the  Gupta
                                                                       period.  As  is  the  case  in  the  present  example,  Narasimha  is
                                                                       depicted with a strong human body, expressive lion head, and
                                                                       a divine second pair of arms.
                                                                       Compare the present lot with a sandstone stele of Narasimha
                                                                       with  similar  iconography  and  composition  sold  at  Sotheby’s
                                                                       New York, 23 March 2007, lot 17.

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