Page 7 - March 23 2022 Boinghams NYC Indian and Himalayan Art
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TIBETAN PAINTINGS FROM THE COLLECTION
          OF RALPH GLASGAL (LOTS 401-416)
          TIBETAN PAINTINGS FROM THE
          COLLECTION OF RALPH GLASGAL
          (LOTS 401-416)
          401
          A RARE PAINTING OF AMITABHA IN
          THE SUKHAVATI
          PROBABLY WESTERN TIBET, 15TH-16TH
          CENTURY
          15v x 9p in. (39.7 x 23.5 cm.)
          $15,000-20,000
          LITERATURE:
          Himalayan Art Resources, item no. 24725.
          This  rare  painting  depicts  the  tathagata,
          Amitabha, seated in the Sukhavati, otherwise
          known as the Western Pure Land. Worship of
          Pure Land and of Amitabha in the Sukhavati in
          particular,  was  extremely  popular  across  the
          Himalayas and East Asia from an early date.
          In  the  present  painting,  Amitabha  is  seated
          on  a  throne  over  a  lotus  blossom  emerging
          from  the  waters  below.  At  the  top  of  the
          painting, the primordial buddha Vajradhara is
          seated alongside the five tathagata or dhyani
          buddhas,  and  the  rest  of  the  composition  is
          filled with a multitude of bodhisattvas, retinue
          figures, and lamas, including six lamas facing
          one  another  and  presumably  passing  along
          Buddhist teachings. Palaces sit in each corner
          of the painting.
          Certain  characteristics  of  the  style  point  to
          a  Western  Tibet  origin  for  the  painting:  the
          triangular  swatches  of  fabric  at  the  front  of
          the throne base, the stylized and exaggerated
          folds  of  the  drapery  of  the  central  figure,
          and  the  lettuce-like  petals  of  the  lotus  base
          are  all  typical  of  Western  Tibetan  paintings,
          particularly from the area of Guge. Compare
          with a painting of Amitabha in the Sukhavati
          in  the  collection  of  the  Brooklyn  Museum  of
          Art (acc. no. 84.265), illustrated on Himalayan
          Art Resources, item no. 86908.

          或為西藏西部   十̩ 十Սˠ紀   無量壽ζ像
 Tibetan Paintings From The
          ֦ḙ
 Collection Of Ralph Glasgal  ğ喜馬拉雅藝術資源Ġ 	)JNBMBZBO "SU
          3FTPVSDFT

 編號




 The following selection of Tibetan paintings (lots 401-416) come from the collection of noted explorer,
 scientist, and audio engineer, Ralph Glasgal (b. 1932). As part of his scientific research and engineering
 work, Glasgal has traveled all over the world, from the icy shores of Antarctica to the Himalayas. As an
 auroral scientist with the United States wintering party of the 1957 Antarctic mission of the International
 Geophysical  Year  at  Wilkes  Station  in  Antarctica,  Glasgal  was  the  first  person  to  set  foot  on  a  small,
 penguin-occupied island in Vincennes Bay – the island was subsequently named for him. In later decades,
 Glasgal’s passions extended to mountaineering, and he has reached the base camps of the world’s ten
 highest mountains. During his time trekking in the Himalayas, he also developed a passion for Tibetan
 art, and Christie’s is honored to present a small portion of Mr. Glasgal’s collection of Tibetan paintings in
 the following lots.

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