Page 14 - 2020 Sept 22 Himalayin and Indian Works of Art Sotheby's NYC Asia Week
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9/2/2020                                Indian, Himalayan & Southeast Asian Works of Art | Sotheby's


       bronze is located in shrine 21 on the fourth row of the cabinet on the East wall of the second floor, see Fanhua Pavilion, The
       Forbidden City Publishing House, Beijing, 2009, p. 451, cat. no. 386. Carcikā is named as one of the sixty-four yogini in early Indian
       tantric literature, see István Keul, ed., Yoginī in South Asia, London and New York, 2013, p. 63. The Carcikā thangka is
       iconographically identical to the Qianlong bronze group in the Fanhua Pavilion, and stylistically similar to Qianlong period paintings
       throughout the Forbidden City, in particular those in the Pavilion of Raining Flowers, the Yuhuage. A hanging consisting of nine
       separate paintings framed within a large silk brocade multi-window mount is suspended along the length of the North wall of the
       first floor of the Yuhuage, see The Palace Museum, Cultural Relics of Tibetan Buddhism Collected in the Qing Palace, Forbidden
       City Press, Beijing, 1992, p. 143, pl. 106. Striking similarities between these paintings and the Carcikā thangka include the palette;
       the cloud design above and the landscape below; the elongated format; and the focus on a large central figure with no
       accompanying primary deities or teachers. Individual thangka paintings in the Palace Collections typically portray the principal
       deity together with iconographically related deities, protectors, teachers and religious hierarchs. The solitary deity format of the
       Carcikā thangka may thus indicate that it was done for a group of paintings mounted together as one hanging, in the manner of
       the Yuhuage example. The Yuhuage was built under the supervision of the Qianlong imperial preceptor Rolpai Dorje (1717-1786),
       who devised the complex iconographic program of the pavilion, see Patricia Berger, Empire of Emptiness: Buddhist Art and Political
       Authority in Qing China, Honolulu, 2003, pp. 97-104. Close stylistic similarities between the Carcikā thangka and the paintings in
       the Yuhuage — constructed between 1750 and ca. 1776 — suggests that the painting is an imperial commission dating to the
       second half of the eighteenth century, and made under the supervision of Rolpai Dorje, the master of esoteric Buddhist
       iconography.


























































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