Page 263 - Christie's Asia Week March 2024 Chinese Art
P. 263

IMPORTANT CHINESE ART INCLUDING THE COLLECTION OF DOROTHY TAPPER GOLDMAN













 Property from a California Collection
 1148
 A VERY RARE AND LARGE GILT-BRONZE FIGURE   美४؟州珍藏
 OF A SEATED LUOHAN  南宋 明׀ 十˕至十̩ˠ紀 鎏金銅羅漢ঙ像
 SOUTHERN SONG-EARLY MING DYNASTY, 13TH-15TH CENTURY  ח文:左Ս
 The interior of the robe in engraved with a number and location, zuo liu (left six).  Ϝ源
 33q in. (85.5 cm.) high  Gerda Mordhorst,紐☼,Ն藏於1978年ע
 Rare Art, Inc.,紐☼
 $500,000-700,000
 PROVENANCE:
 Gerda Mordhorst Collection, New York, prior to 1978.
 Rare Art, Inc. New York.

 This masterfully cast gilt-bronze figure of a luohan is exceptional for   Tang-dynasty Emperor Xuanzang’s translation of Nandimitravadana,
 its large size, the sensitive rendering of his serene face, and the fluid   a scripture dedicated to the Sixteen Arhats (Luohan), in AD 654
 and elegant treatment of the drapery. He takes the form of a youthful   provided the theological foundation for the cult of luohan as well as
 Buddhist monk wearing a Chinese-style robe and is shown sitting in a   the basis for their artistic representations, which took shape in the
 contemplative pose his hands joined in dhyana-mudra, an attitude of   late Tang/Five-Dynasties periods. Although there are depictions of
 meditation, and with his legs crossed beneath his robe which falls in   monks in cave sculpture of the Tang period, the earliest depiction of
 graceful folds as if draped over an edge. Two characters, zuo liu (left   the Sixteen Luohan, as prescribed in Nandimitravadana, is found in
 six), inscribed on the inside hem of his robe, likely indicate the figure’s   the Yanxia Cave in Hangzhou, dated to AD 953 during the Wuyue
 intended placement when displayed in a temple.   Kingdom period. Apart from the Sixteen Luohan in the scripture, two
 more figures were added: Nandimitra, the author of Nandimitravadana,
 The worship of luohan reached its peak in the Song dynasty, when   and another unnamed figure, possibly Xuanzang. The Yanxia Cave
 stories of miraculous events associated with luohan were widespread   set can thus also be considered the earliest depiction of the Eighteen
 and propagated by the literati class. From the imperial family to laymen,   Luohan, a composition not rooted in any Buddhist scriptures, but
 all were participating in the worship, and the Northern Song-dynasty   which gained popularity from the Song period onwards.
 statesman, calligrapher and poet Su Shi, also known as Su Dongpo (1037-
 1101), was the most famous amongst them. His maternal grandfather,   There are few bronze figures of luohan that can be definitively dated to
 Cheng Wenying was said to have received generous help from sixteen   the Song dynasty. Among the most notable are the four figures dating
 monks, whom he believed to be the Sixteen Luohan in disguise, when   to the Northern Song dynasty in the Xiangguo Temple in Kaifeng. They
 he suffered crippling adversity at one point in his life. Thereafter, Cheng   were allegedly part of a set of Fine Hundred Luohan, all which except
 Wenying organized four large-scale ceremonies of luohan worship every   for these four were destroyed in 1927. The Xiangguo Temple figures
 year to commemorate them. When Su Shi was demoted and banished   display a naturalistic, unadorned style not dissimilar to that of the
 to Hainan Island, he remembered his grandfather’s story, and visited a   current figure.
 local luohan temple to pay his respects. He offered his calligraphy to
 the temple and also composed four poems in praise of luohan. Later, he   The present figure is very similar in style and size to a gilt-bronze figure
 acquired a painting of the Eighteen Luohan by Zhang Xuan of the Five   of a seated luohan dated to the Song-Yuan dynasty sold at Christie’s
 Dynasties period (AD 907-979), and sent it as a gift to his brother Su   Hong Kong, 30 May 2016, lot 3233, and now in the Tsz Shan Monastery
 Che. There was a wide range of subjects for which people offered their   Buddhist Art Museum, and to another pair of seated gilt-bronze figures
 prayers to luohan in the Song dynasty: prayers concerning the weather   sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 1 October 1991, lot 1668. The close
 (rain); health and longevity; success in examination and officialdom; and   similarity of these three figures and the current figure may indicate
 prayers for the dead – almost every aspect of one’s life was touched by   they were originally part of the same set. A pair of stylistically similar
 the worship of luohan.  gilt-bronze figures of luohan of comparable size, but shown with legs
 pendent, was sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 30 March 2022, lot 2891,
 Although the origin of luohan can be traced to the arhats in Indian   and is now in The Cleveland Museum of Art, acc. no 4.2023. Like
 scriptures, arhats were not objects of devotion in ancient India. The   the current luohan, both of the Cleveland figures are inscribed with
 cult of luohan and its artistic representation is therefore indigenous   two-characters (zuo si [left four] and you si [right four]) which likely
 to China, a by-product of Buddhism’s long history of sinicization. The   indicate their intended placement when on display.








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