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A COPPER ALLOY FIGURE OF BUDDHA
SRI LANKA, ANURADHAPURA PERIOD, 8TH CENTURY3 in. (7.5 cm) high
注脚
This rare and early Buddhist bronze from Sri Lanka's Late Anuradhapura period (691-1017 CE) has elegant proportions and delightful facial features. His hands resting in his lap have well-modeled digits and his slender waist, underneath a sheer monastic garment, gives rise to broad shoulders. With almond-shaped eyes, high cheekbones, and a smile gently lifting the corners of his mouth, the Buddha is depicted in blissful meditation. A small flame elicits from the top of his head; a beacon of his enlightened mind, characteristic of Sri Lankan bronzes.The flame's relatively diminutive size is a telling marker of the bronze's 8th-century date, situating it on the earlier side of Late-Anuradhapura bronzes which were produced up until the early 11th century. Also telling are the absence of two stylistic developments that arise by the 8th century: a widow's peak and a monastic shawl (sanghati) draped over the Buddha's proper left shoulder (Listopad, Guardian of the Flame, Phoenix, 2003, pp.73-6). Later bronzes are more numerous and less nuanced, exhibiting a gradual trend towards the production of multiple iterations from the same molds (ibid., pp.75-6). Having a unique character and an attractive patination, this piece is a particularly handsome example which should be ranked among similar, renown versions, such as those in the Cleveland Museum of Art, the National Museum, Colombo, and arguably the finest in the Kronos Collection (see, von Schroeder, Buddhist Sculptures of Sri Lanka, Hong Kong, 1990, pp.189, 192 & 195, nos.46E, 48A & 49H, respectively).ProvenanceCollection of Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Bull, Villanova, PennsylvaniaSotheby's, New York, 6 December 1983, lot 278Private West Coast Collection