
Lot 115 - A181AS Asian Art: Himalaya, China - Tuesday, 13. June 2017, 10.00 AM
A BRONZE FIGURE OF BUDDHA SHAKYAMUNI ON A LION THRONE.
Rückseitige Sanskrit-Stifterinschrift in Siddhamatrika-Schrift: Hum Mahavira Svaha “Heil Dir oh grosser Held!”
This Buddha could possibly originate from the Nalanda Monastery in Bihar in North India. Nalanda was a famous centre for Buddhist studies between the 8th and 12th centuries. Scholars from many countries outside India studied sometimes for many years Vajrayana Buddhism at the Nalanda University. On the way back to their home countries they usually carried in addition to manuscripts written on palm-leaf also small statues cast in bronze or made of stone. This Buddha image must have been for more than 1000 years in Tibet and was countless times touched and ritually washed, as indicated by the shiny surface.
Compare: Von Schroeder, Ulrich. 1981. Indo-Tibetan Bronzes, pp. 252–261, plates 54–58. Von Schroeder, Ulrich. 2001. Buddhist Sculptures in Tibet, Volume One: India & Nepal; pp. 228-229, pl. 67.
From a private family collection since several generations.
寶獅座釋迦摩尼佛銅像。
CHF 0 / 0 | (€ 0 / 0)
Sold for CHF 1 170 500 (including buyer’s premium)
All information is subject to change.