Page 42 - March 23 2022 Boinghams NYC Indian and Himalayan Art
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PROPERTY FROM THE YANG FAMILY COLLECTION
          421
          A SMALL AND RARE GILT BRONZE FIGURE OF
          KAPALADHARA HEVAJRA
          TIBET, 15TH CENTURY
          2æ in. (7 cm.) high
          $15,000-20,000
          PROVENANCE:
          Acquired in Moscow, 2016, by repute.

          LITERATURE:
          Himalayan Art Resources, item no. 24740.
          The present work is distinguished by its extremely fine casting despite its
          small size. Although it is possible it was made for a small, personal shrine, it
          favorably compares in size and casting technique to images of Kapaladhara
          Hevajra that form the central image of a bronze lotus mandala, with lotus
          petals articulated to open and close. Such mandalas were first created in
          Northeastern India during the Pala period in the twelfth century, but which
          continued to be cast in Tibet and China into the fifteenth century. Compare,
          for  example,  with  an  ungilt  bronze  lotus  mandala  with  Kapaladhara
          Hevajra  at  its  center  in  the  collection  of  the  Qing  Palace  Collection  in
          Beijing, illustrated in Cultural Relics of Tibetan Buddhism Collected in the
          Qing Palace, Beijing, 1998, pp. 148-149, cat. no. 67. See, also, a gilt-bronze
          example  created  in  the  imperial  workshops  of  the  Yongle  period  with
          Vajrabhairava at its center, illustrated in Treasures from Snow Mountains:
          Gems of Tibetan Cultural Relics, Shanghai, 2001, pp. 84-89, cat. no. 22. An
          early, ungilt lotus mandala of Chakrasamvara and Vajravarahi was sold at
          Christie's New York, 14 September 2010, lot 61.

          西藏   十五世紀   鎏金銅喜金剛立像
          來源:
          得自於莫斯科, 2016年 (傳)
          出版:
          “喜馬拉雅藝術資源” (Himalayan Art Resources), 編號24740



































          A rare articulated bronze mandala of Chakrasamvara and Vajravarahi; Northeastern
          India, late Pala period, 13th century; 16½ in. (42 cm.) high; sold, Christie’s New York,
          14 September 2010, lot 61, for $122,500.
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