Page 161 - 2020 Sept Important Chinese Art Sotheby's NYC Asia Week
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9/2/2020 Important Chinese Art | Sotheby's
Jason Steuber,〈Collecting History Before its Time〉,《Orientations》,期44,2013年3月,頁153至156
Catalogue Note
This figure of a guardian embodies many of the remarkable qualities of Tang dynasty sculptures, when China’s sculptural tradition
reached its most developed phase. The powerful muscular body and vigorous stance enhance the graceful folds and subtle
swaying of the skirt, while the facial features display the ‘spiritual naturalism’ characteristic of the period. The figure depicts a
heavenly being with exaggerated features, but one also imbued with human qualities. The rectangular form of the carving as well
as the slight disproportionate size of the left foot suggest that this piece was once placed on the lower left corner of a niche or
entrance.
This figure shares similarities with sculptures from the Longmen cave complex in Henan province. Situated near present-day
Luoyang, cave temples were built here from the Northern Wei (386-534) through the Tang dynasty, in particular during the reigns
of Emperor Gaozong (r. 650-683) and Empress Wu Zetian (r. 684-704), who actively supported the spread of Buddhism. Compare
for example the two dvarapala with similar features from the Jinandong cave at Longmen, which began to be built in 684,
illustrated in situ in Zhongguo meishu quanji. Diao su bian [The Complete Series on Chinese Art. Sculpture], vol. 11, Beijing, 1998,
pls 180 and 181, together with a figure at the Binyang cave, pl. 114, and a free-standing sculpture of a guardian, pl. 191; and two
guardians in front of the Kanjing temple, built between 690 and 704 AD, illustrated in Longmen shiku [Longmen caves], Beijing,
1980, pl. 199.
Further related sculptures include three figures illustrated in Osvald Sirén, Chinese Sculpture, New York, 1970, vol. III-IV, pls 480a-
b, 490, the first two in the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Philadelphia, and the third of
much larger size from the David Weill Collection; and a figure included in An Exhibition of Chinese Sculptures, C.T. Loo & Co., New
York, 1940, cat. no. 33.
Figures of fierce guardians with muscular bodies and wearing only a loin cloth are also known as dvarapala. Based on Hindu
guardians, they were generally displayed in pairs outside the entrance of Buddhist temples, as they were believed to have the
power to ward off evil spirits. In some Buddhist scriptures they are identified as Garbhavira and Vajravira, the former often
depicted with his mouth opened uttering the syllable ‘a’, symbolizing the beginning of life, while the latter with his mouth closed
making the sound ‘um’, such as the present figure.
https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2020/important-chinese-art?locale=en 161/435