Page 30 - 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



       Catalogue Note
       Beginning in central Tibet in the second half of the twelfth century, representations of living gurus became visually synonymous
       with depictions of buddhas. These thangkas portraying gurus were primarily meant to act as the “‘living’ presences” of the teacher
       and provided the main means of spiritual worship for followers at the time (S. Kossak, Painted Images of Enlightenment, Mumbai,
       2010, p. 41). This movement, tied to the rise of guru worship in the twelfth century, became largely associated with the portrait of
       Phagmodrupa (1110-11700), and there remain several close examples of his portrait, including this present work. (D.
       Jackson, Mirror of the Buddha: Early Portraits from Tibet, New York, 2011, pp. 133-134).

       The founder of the Pagdru Kagyu School, Phagmodrupa attracted meditators and followers to his hut in Phagmodru, a juniper
       forest that would later become the celebrated site of Densatil Monastery. His teaching, said to be profound, encouraged monks to
       come from afar to study with the great master, and his reputation among students gave him an elevated status that likened him to
       that of a deity.

       By placing Phagmodrupa at the center of the painting in a large proportion, he holds the position typically associated with a deity.
       The ornamented lotus seat on which he sits and the embellished throne back flanked by two viyalas, all painted with richly textural
       details, is majestic and ceremonial. His hands gently twist in the elegant gesture of the vitarka mudra, the gesture of exposition,
       marking the great power of his teachings. The delicately painted golden wheels on his hands and feet represent the physical
       attributes of an enlightened being.


       While he maintains venerated status in the painting, he also possesses details that capture the likeness of his individualized
       features. In all the extant examples, Phagmodrupa is portrayed with his hair closely cropped in an identical manner, a light shading
       of facial hair, a wide face, a rounded nose and his mouth open showing his teeth (Jackson, p.138). Certain facial features make him
       instantly recognizable, but at the same time his body and the styling of his robes take on a more generic type, a format that can be
       linked visually to other portraits of Taklung masters. There is a play between the individualized features and the more naturalistic
       approach that Kossak discusses, and this contrast would have personalized the presence of the guru for the student while at the
       same time upholding his deified status (Kossack, 84).


       In the borders of the painting are representations of spiritual adepts and included to link the teacher within the continuity of a
       spiritual lineage. They “proclaim the teachers’ historic role as links in the unbroken chain of received mysteries emanating from
       India that made them repositories of supernatural religious power and prestige.” (ibid.) Phagmodrupa was a disciple of Gampopa
       and student of the long lineage of Karma Kagyu masters, including Tilopa, Naropa, Marpa and Milarepa, represented here in the
       upper border. Only one other portrait of Phagmodrupa portraying the Kagyu lineage remains in the Tamashige Collection (The
       World of Mandala- Tamashige Tibet Collection, Okura Museum of Art, Japan, 2005, cat. no. 17), making this thangka a rare and
       masterful example of the Taklung portraiture style.





























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