LOT 0361 克什米尔 九至十世纪 铜错银度母立像
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高20.3cm
拍品描述:来源 Henry Spencers and Son Auctioneers,英格兰诺丁汉郡雷特福德市广场,1996年1月 Paul M Peters Fine Art Ltd,英格兰北约克郡哈罗盖特 John Nicholson's,英格兰萨里郡黑斯尔米尔,2018年4月18日,拍品编号 141 纽约苏富比,2020年9月22日,拍品编号 316 The present figure of Tara is identifiable by the akshamala rosary held in her right hand and the long lotus stem and flower sprouting along her left side. She stands upon a lotus base in the abhanga pose, subtly flexed at the hip. A light headscarf covers the back of Tara’s head, and lightly drapes over her proper left arm as it merges into a beaded garland that attaches to a suspended garter on each of her thighs. She is dressed in a form-fitting girdle top, and a long unpleated skirt which is only represented on the rear side of her legs. She is otherwise adorned with a heavy row of collar necklaces, and thick bracelets and anklets. The figure is inscribed on the base deyadharm[o] ya[ṃ] ṣīsīpo, or This is the pious gift of Yī(or Ṣī)sīpa, in the proto-Śāradā script used between 650 and 1000 AD before the Śāradā spready widely throughout Kashmir. Intriguingly, the donor’s name, Yī(or Ṣī)sīpa, is unrecognizable amongst known languages in the region. Like many Kashmiri images, the deep, lustrous patina of the present work suggests it was never buried or excavated, but rather had been brought out of Kashmir as a personal object during religious upheaval. While the present figure can by stylistically related to many figures of Buddha and the bodhisattva from the reason, representations of female deities are comparatively rare. Of note, the present lot can be compared to a late 10th-early 11th century figure of Dhanada Tara, sold at Christie’s New York, 24 March 1995, lot 27, also published by U. von Schroeder in Indo-Tibetan Bronzes, Hong Kong, 1981, pp.128-9, no. 21 E. The Dhanada Tara is likewise inscribed on the base the pious gift of the worshipper Ujalaknata. The two works are similarly modeled in a corset type tunic, which exposes the navel as it meets a belt at the hip embellished with jeweled ornaments. This type of cinched bodice can be found in much earlier sculpture works in the region, across mediums, including, for example, a 7th century bronze figure of Prajnaparamita and a 9th century black stone figure of Gadanari, both published by J. Siudmak in The Hindu-Buddhist Sculpture of Ancient Kashmir and its Influences, Leiden and Boston, 2013, p. 304, pl. 141 and p. 441, pl. 203.
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