Page 121 - Sotheby's Arts of Asia Paris, June 16, 2022
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                       PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT EUROPEAN PRIVATE
                       COLLECTION
                       A GILT-COPPER FIGURE OF A BULL
 122
                       TIBET, CA. 15TH CENTURY
 PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT EUROPEAN PRIVATE   shrine, each holding a ritual implement in his left hand and
 COLLECTION  raising the index finger of his right hand to the mouth in a   standing on all fours, the neck and bridge of the nose with
                       incised lines, the mouth ajar, with horns curving around his
 A COPPER BHAIRAVA SHRINE BASE   gesture implying silence (maunavrata). In an identical scene   small ears, the short tail resting on his left haunch
 depicted on a similar fourteenth century or earlier Nepalese
 NEPAL, CA. 14TH CENTURY  copper shrine, formerly in the Pan-Asian Collection, Dr. Pal   13.3 cm, 5¼ in.
 depicting a charnel ground with a cremation scene in the   has suggested that these deities probably represent the   PROVENANCE
 foreground and a barking dog in the centre representing   five forms of Shiva that are equated with the five elements
 the mount (vahana) of Bhairava, the fierce emanation of   (panchabhuta), see Pal, Nepal: Where the Gods are Young,   Sotheby’s, London, 20th September 1985, lot 15.
 Shiva, flanked by two carrion birds and a coiled snake, with   New York, 1975, cat. 64. The Pan-Asian example has four   Although animals are frequently found in iconographic
 a stupa to the left and linga to the right. Five deities are   posts rising at the centre that Pal suggests would have   compositions throughout the Himalayan area, the exact
 seated around the edges of the shrine, each holding a ritual   supported a roof over the shrine. In this example the posts   purpose of apparently independent animal figures is not
 implement in his left hand and raising the index finger of   are incorporated into the the top of the heads of the deities   known. A bull figure of related characteristics, is published
 his right hand to the mouth in a gesture implying silence   at each corner. Pal also notes that the inclusion of both the   in Kramrisch, Nepal, p. 80, no. 44. Compare also two other
 (maunavrata)  stupa and the linga indicates that the shrine is venerated by   related figures sold in our London rooms, 25th November
 13 x 7.2 x 5 cm, 5⅛ by 2⅞ by 2 in.  Buddhists as well as Shaivas.  1980, lot 42 and 30th November 1983, lot 241.
 The scene depicts a charnel ground with a cremation   Base d’autel de Bhairava en cuivre, Népal, vers XIVe siècle  Statuette de taureau en cuivre doré, Tibet, vers XVe siècle
 scene in the foreground and a barking dog in the centre.
 The dog represents the mount (vahana) of Bhairava, the   ‡  7 000-9 000€     ‡  2 000-3 000€
 fierce emanation of Shiva, and is often substituted for
 Bhairava himself. The dog is flanked by two carrion birds   尼泊爾 約十四世紀 銅陪臚龕座  西藏 約十五世紀 鎏金銅牛像
 and a coiled snake, with a stupa to the left and linga to
 the right. Five deities are seated around the edges of the      來源 :
                       倫敦蘇富比,1985年9月20日,編號15                                                                123





                       124
                       PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT EUROPEAN PRIVATE
                       COLLECTION
                       A CARVED WOOD SUTRA COVER
                       TIBET, 13TH CENTURY
                       depicting the Four-armed Prajnaparamita at the centre, the
                       goddess of wisdom flanked and surrounded by Buddhas and
                       Tathagatas, traces of gilding and red laquer
                       68.7 x 21.2 x 2.5 cm, 27 by 8⅜ by 1 in.
                       Couverture de sutra en bois sculpté, Tibet, XIIIe siècle
                       ‡  8 000-12 000€
                       西藏 十三世紀 木雕佛像紋經板




















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