LOT 0305 尼泊尔 卡萨王国 十三至十四世纪 鎏金铜释迦牟尼佛坐像
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高16.2cm
著录:出版 Himalayan Art Resources, item no. 24861. 展开 拍品描述:来源 私人珍藏,1996年3月10日入藏 This richly-gilt and benevolent depiction of Buddha Shakyamuni, with his graceful posture, simple ornamentation, and large and powerfully-cast lotus base, is a masterful work of Himalayan metal-casting and a rare example of sculpture from the Khasa Malla kingdom of western Nepal. Comparatively speaking, little is known about the Khasa Malla Kingdom aside from their artistic patronage and their occasional raids of the Kathmandu Valley. The consensus among scholars is that this devoutly Buddhist Kingdom was born from a tribe led into the Karnali Basin (in what is now western Nepal) by their first king, Nagaraja in the twelfth century, and that the kings who succeeded him maintained a positive relationship with the western Tibetan subjects under his control, as evidenced by gifts to Tibetan temples. Scholarship on this very distinct style of sculpture perhaps began with independent scholar Ian Alsop’s article, Metal Sculpture of the Khasa Malla Kingdom published in the Asian Art periodical, Orientations, June 1994, Volume 25, Number 6 and the expanded version he published on asianart.com in August of 2005. Therein, Alsop describes the style as a clear adaptation of Kathmandu Valley style distinguished by its redesigned ornamentation, petite yet weighty physiognomy, and extravagant gilding. Many of the aspects associated with the Khasa Malla sculptural style are found in the present work. The joints of each finger, for example, are delineated through incised lines on the back of the hands, a detail not often represented in Kathmandu Valley images but common to those from the Khasa Malla kingdom. Compare, for example, with the hands of a gilt-copper figure of Shadakshari Lokeshvara sold at Bonhams New York, 23 July 2020, lot 848, which also pays particularly close attention to the delineation of the finger joints. The details of the face in the present bronze also closely mirror many of the most well-known Khasa Malla works of sculpture: the steeply-arched brows that nearly join at the top of the nose above the deeply-recessed eye well with pronounced, mounded almond-shaped eyes. Compare, for example, with the related facial features of the famous image of Queen Dipa Malla in the collection of the National Museum of Asian Art, Washington, D.C., and illustrated by P. Pal in Himalayas: An Aesthetic Adventure, Chicago, 2003, p. 22, fig. 2. While most metal images from the Khasa Malla kingdom depict the figures with large, simple hoop earrings, the present image represents Shakyamuni Buddha, who has cast aside all of the trappings of a princely life; in the place of earrings, therefore, two lotus blossoms are entwined within the long piercings of his ears, giving the impression of a more organic ornamentation. His simple sanghati is detailed only with a rice-grain pattern along the hems. The base of the figure closely aligns with the traditional Khasa Malla aesthetic, with large, ornately rendered lotus petals below a deeply-recessed area just below a thick, beaded rim. The deeply-recessed area and the back of the base are applied with dark red pigmentation, another feature usually found in Khasa Malla bronzes. A gilt-copper figure of Shadakshari Lokeshvara in the John Gilmore Ford Collection, illustrated by I. Alsop in ibid., fig. 8, shows a similar representation of the lotus petals, as well as the extant red pigmentation in the recessed areas of the base. Given that there are so few remaining examples of Khasa Malla sculpture remaining, the market for such works has been inordinately strong. A gilt-copper figure of Hevajra and Nairatmya sold at Christie’s New York on 22 March 2011, lot 425, for $158,500. More recently, the gilt-copper figure of Shadakshari at Bonhams New York sold for $956,075 and a few months later, a gilt-copper figure of Maitreya sold at Bonhams New York, 23 September 2020 for $680,075. 展开
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