五代 銅菩薩坐像 11 3?16 in. (28.5 cm.) high, cloth box五代 銅菩薩坐像 11 3?16 in. (28.5 cm.) high, cloth box
1990年代購自日本(傳)
私人珍藏
拍品專文
This unusual figure belongs to a group of Buddhist votive figures produced in Zhejiang province during the Wuyue Kingdom (AD 907-978), four of which are illustrated in Comprehensive Illustrated Catalogue of Chinese Buddhist Statues in Overseas Collections, vol. 6, Beijing, 2005, pls. 1234-37: one in the Seikado Bunko Art Museum, Japan (pl. 1234); two in the Harvard University Art Museums, Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Cambridge, (pls. 1235 and 1236); and one in The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, pl. 1237; all dated to the 10th century. Of these four, the figure in the Seikado Bunko Art Museum represents Buddha, while the other three represent bodhisattvas. All of these figures including the current figure of bodhisattva have similar, distinctive facial features, a very similar openwork aureole, and are seated on a flat circular disk. In the case of the published figures, this circular disk is fitted into a lotus, which appears to be of two types: one type has the appearance of a large, rounded flower head composed of multiple, narrow, convex petals attached to a central structure (Seikado Bunko Art Museum and The Metropolitan Museum of Art figures); the other two are low and cast with more standard lotus petals and are raised on a waisted pedestal (Harvard University Museum figures). These lotus-form sections are, in turn, raised on a censer-like platform of barbed petal outline with a pierced top and six small legs which rest on top of a tiered stand. The bodhisattva in The Metropolitan Museum of Art (Fig. 1) is also illustrated by D. Leidy and D. Strahan in Wisdom Embodied: Chinese Buddhist and Daoist Sculpture in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2010, p. 110-12, no. 22, where the authors ascribe the figure to Zhejiang province, which during the 10th century was the center of the Wuyue Kingdom (AD 907-978). They note that the "kingdom was ruled by members of the Qian family, noted for their devotion to Buddhism and their patronage of the arts", and point out that the large flowers and type of foliate scrolls in the openwork aureole are characteristic of works produced in the Zhejiang area. In the discussion of the unusual construction of the sculpture, p. 110, the flat disk on which the figure sits is described as a "flat removable lid with three semi-circular feet" that "serves as a cover for the lotus."Other figures from this group include the example lacking its lotus stand illustrated by Saburo Matsubara in Chogoku Bukkyo Chokokushi Kenkyu (History of Chinese Buddhist Sculpture), Tokyo, 1961, pl. 182 (b), and was sold at Treasures of the Noble Path: Early Buddhist Art from Japanese Collections; Christie’s New York, 14 September 2017, lot 838. (Fig. 2) Another comparable example was sold at Sotheby’s London, 17 December 1996, lot 178, and again sold at Sotheby’s New York, 23 September 2020, lot 584. A third example was sold at Christie's New York, 3 June 1988, lot 321. It is noteworthy that the present figure appears to be the only example of this group shown wearing a headdress.
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