Page 91 - September 20th 2021, Indian and Himalayan Art Christie's NYC
P. 91

PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT COLLECTION
 440
 A RARE GREY SCHIST HEAD OF A BODHISATTVA  古犍陀羅   三/四世紀   灰片岩菩薩首
 ANCIENT REGION OF GANDHARA, 3RD-4TH CENTURY CE
 12Ω in. (31.8 cm.) high  來源:
 美國西岸私人珍藏,不晚於1999年。
 $12,000-18,000
 PROVENANCE:
 Private collection, West Coast, by 1999.








 This crisply carved head of a bodhisattva features a rare and unusual
 motif at the center  of the  turban crest: the depiction  of Garuda
 capturing a nagini, a beautiful female representation of a naga, in his
 peak.  The  bird-like  creature  is  said  to  eat  snakes  daily in vengeance
 against the Naga tribes, the serpents who captured his mother. This
 scene mirrors the event in Greek mythology when Zeus turns into
 an eagle and kidnaps the boy Ganymede. This motif is known to be
 depicted in the headdresses of images of Avalokiteshvara, although it
 is  rarely  found in  surviving examples. See  I.  Kurita,  Gandharan Art II:
 The World of the Buddha, 2003, p.311 and D. Klimburg-Salter, Buddha
 in Indien. Die fruehindische Skulptur von Koenig Asoka bis zur Guptazeit,
 1995,  cat.  No.  138 for  comparable  figures  of  bodhisattvas  with  this
 turban motif. Also compare to a small, but well-preserved fragment of
 a Garuda turban ornament sold at Christie’s New York 18 March 2015,
 lot 4009, for $13,750.
































 A grey schist turban ornament with Garuda and Nagini; ancient region of Gandhara, 2nd-3rd
 century; 4½ in. (11.4 cm.) high; sold, Christie’s New York 18  March 2015, lot 4009, for $13,750.
   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96