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观音菩萨:观音菩萨033 [2019/11/14 11:39] artemis 创建 |
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- | ====清代西藏布达拉宫铜鎏金观音菩萨三怙主像==== | + | =====5世纪北魏皇兴四年(470年)铜鎏金王钟造观音立像(香港苏富比)===== |
- | {{tag> 主题:释迦牟尼佛 产地: | + | {{tag> 主题:观音菩萨 |
- | ~~PAGEIMAGE:<: | + | ~~PAGEIMAGE:<: |
- | **尺寸:中尊观音高0.23米,南尊文殊高0.24米,北尊金刚持高0.22米\\ | + | **尺寸:高27.7cm\\ |
- | 年代:清代 | + | 年代:北魏皇兴四年(470年)\\ |
质地:铜鎏金\\ | 质地:铜鎏金\\ | ||
- | 备注:西藏拉萨布达拉宫红宫长寿乐极殿 | + | 风格:中原\\ |
- | 来源:西藏拉萨布达拉宫**\\ | + | 来源:拍卖会\\ |
- | {{ : | + | 成交:11, |
+ | 参阅:[[https:// | ||
+ | 鉴赏:**\\ | ||
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+ | 坂本五郎珍藏早期佛教铜像 | ||
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+ | 发愿文:皇兴四年七月九王钟夫妻为亡父母造观世音像一躯。愿令亡父母常与观世音萨共生一处。 | ||
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+ | 十六国及北魏早期佛像多为一佛跌坐于方座,两旁有二狮子,题材和构图单调,至皇兴(467年)后,造像的题材趋多样化,站立之观音、弥勒亦多出现。 | ||
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+ | ---- | ||
+ | A MAGNIFICENT AND EXTREMELY RARE LARGE GILT-BRONZE VOTIVE FIGURE OF PADMAPANI NORTHERN WEI DYNASTY, DATED 4TH YEAR OF THE HUANGXING PERIOD (IN ACCORDANCE WITH 470) | ||
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+ | very finely cast as a standing manifestation of Avalokitesvara in the form of Padmapani, the lotus-bearing bodhisattva depicted standing sturdily against a mandorla bordered with ferocious flaming swirls on a lotus base supported on a splayed four-legged cusped plinth, rendered holding a lotus stem in his right hand with the right elbow bent, the stem extending upward and bearing a lotus bud, the left hand holding one end of the billowing scarf draped over the shoulders and arms, , adorned in a dhoti with voluminous folds cascading over his knees, the serene countenance framed by a headdress and circular halo, the splayed reverse of the plinth incised with a dedicatory inscription dated to the fourth year of the Huangxing period (in accordance with 470), which can be translated as 'Wang Zhongtian patronising a figure of Padmapani for his parents, with the hope that the parents can be in the presence of Padmapani', | ||
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+ | Exhibited\\ | ||
+ | Chugoku Kodai Choukoku Ten [Chinese Ancient Sculptures], | ||
+ | Exhibition of Eastern Art celebrating the opening of the Gallery of Eastern Antiques, Tokyo National Museum, Tokyo, 1968, cat. no. 528.\\ | ||
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+ | Literature\\ | ||
+ | Mizuno Seiichi, Chūgoku no chōkoku: Sekibutsu. Kondōbutsu/ | ||
+ | Saburo Matsubara, Chugoku Bukkyo Choukoku Shi Kenkyu [Chinese Buddhist Sculpture - A study based on bronze and stone statues other than works from cave temples], Tokyo, 1961, pls. 23a-b.\\ | ||
+ | Saburo Matsubara, Zoutei Chugoku Bukkyo Choukoku Shi Kenkyu [Chinese Buddhist Sculpture - A study based on bronze and stone statues other than works from cave temples], Tokyo, 1966, pls. 23a-b.\\ | ||
+ | Saburo Matsubara, Chugoku Bukkyo Choukuku Shi Ron/History of Chinese Buddhist Sculpture, Tokyo, 1995, vol. I, pl. 35a.\\ | ||
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+ | Catalogue Note\\ | ||
+ | Encapsulating the finest qualities of fifth century sculpture, with its sensitive modelling inspired by the art of Gandhara, and crisp articulation of the aristocratic features of the bodhisattva in a powerful standing posture, the Sakamoto Padmapani is arguably the greatest example of its type remaining in private hands. It has a longstanding history in Japan, where it was discussed and illustrated by the eminent scholars Mizuno Seiichi and Saburo Matsubara in the 1960s, who recognised the importance of its dated inscription. Large in size, intricately cast and framed by the powerful flaming mandorla, it reveals the gradual evolution of an indigenous style of Buddhism in northern China and draws light on the popularity of the cult of Padmapani under the rule of the Northern Wei dynasty (386-534). | ||
+ | Buddhism flourished in an era of political turbulence and intense social and cultural change, under the patronage of the founders, the Tuoba clan of the Xianbei people from Central Asia. Having finally unified northern China in 439, their quest for legitimacy as outsiders made them particularly well disposed to a foreign religion. The sculptural style of votive images produced in the dynasty gradually evolved from showing strong Indian influences in the 4th and early 5th century, as seen on lots 3201 and 3202 in this collection, to the current figure, where Gandharan influences are still present in the treatment of the drapery, but the style has evolved to a slightly more sinicised mode of expression. | ||
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+ | The figure displays characteristics closely associated with the second half of the fifth century, that may be traced back to Gandharan models, as explained by Hugo Munsterberg in 'A Group of Chinese Buddhist Bronzes From the D’Ajeta Collection’, | ||
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+ | The closest published example of this unusually large size, cast with similar powerful flaming mandorla, is an earlier gilt-bronze figure of Padmapani, dated to 453, in the Freer Gallery of Art, accession number F1909.266. Compare also a figure of standing Sakyamuni, dated to 475, unearthed in Mengcun, Mancheng county, Hebei in 1967, and now preserved in Hebei Provincial Museum, illustrated in Zhongguo wenwu jinghua daquan. Qingtong Juan, Taipei, 1993, p. 347, pl. 1249 and in Saburo Matsubara, Chugoku Bukkyo Choukuku Shi Ron/The Path of Chinese Buddhist Sculpture, Tokyo, 1995, vol. I., pl. 35b. | ||
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+ | For other dated examples in museum collections, | ||
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+ | A smaller figure of Padmapani, with a cyclical date corresponding to 484, formerly in the collections of Chen Jieqi and Marquis Blasco Lanza d’Ajeta, Italian Ambassador to Japan (1813-84), was sold in our New York rooms, 19th March 2013, lot 12; another, dated to 504, from the Idemitsu Museum, was sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 29th/30th October 2001, lot 503; and a third, dated to 516/517, from the Stoclet collection, was sold in our London rooms, 11th May 1965, lot 121. | ||
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+ | Placing the current bronze in the context of Northern Wei stone sculpture, Mizuno Seiichi in his landmark work Chugoku No Choukoku: Sekibutsu. Kondobutsu/ | ||
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+ | The cult of the bodhisattva Padmapani, known as the "lotus bearer” – a manifestation of Avalokitesvara, | ||
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