app download
ArtFox APP
Home > Auction >  印度及喜马拉雅艺术 >  Lot.0116 Tibet,14th century A thangka depicting a mandala of Vajra Na...

LOT 0116 Tibet,14th century A thangka depicting a mandala of Vajra Na...

Starting price
USD150,000
Estimate  USD  150,000 ~ 250,000

Viewed  286  Frequency

Pre-bid 0  Frequency

Log in to view

logo Collect

苏富比

印度及喜马拉雅艺术

苏富比

Name

Size

Description

Translation provided by Youdao

Translate
Size

Height 60.5cm;Width 53.2cm

Description

拍品描述:西藏 十四世纪 无我佛母唐卡 Himalayan Art Resources item no. 13825 HAR编号13825 distemper on cloth For further information on the condition of this lot please contact Alexandra.Farahnik@sothebys.com Collection of Stella Kramrisch (1896-1993). American Private Collection, since circa 1970. Himalayan Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, 1978. The painting depicts the fifteen-deity mandala of Nairatmya, “Without Self,” the consort of Hevajra. The goddess is depicted at the center of a lotus that fills the palace grounds, with twelve goddesses of her retinue on the petals around her, one in the east gate and one in the west, together with four skull cups placed on long-life vases. The palace is supported on a multi-colored lotus surrounded by the eight charnel grounds and an outer ring of fire. Hevajra, with eight faces and sixteen arms, is depicted in union with Nairatmya in the upper left quadrant outside the palace grounds, the three-faced and six-armed Hevajra with Shringkhala in the upper right, two-armed dancing Hevajra in the lower left and four-armed Hevajra in union with Vajravarahi in the lower right, each flanked by lamas and deities and encircled by scrolling vine. A lineage in the upper register depicts the celestial progenitor Vajradhara with Indian adepts and Tibetan Sakya hierarchs. A presiding monk in the lower register is seated beside an assembly of offerings, with the dharmapalas Shri Devi and Mahakala and ten dancing Yogini. The Nairatmya thangka is a pair to the Raktayamari mandala formerly in the Zimmerman Family Collection, and now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (acc. no. 2012.444.3), see Marylin M. Rhie and Robert A. F. Thurman, Wisdom and Compassion: The Sacred Art of Tibet, expanded edition, 1996, pp 231-32, cat. 75, (fig. 1). Both paintings include a dedicatory inscription on the reverse “for the meditation of the Holy Hermit of Janpukpa, Lama Khedsun Kunga Lekpa”, ibid, p. 231. Rhie and Thurman have identified Kunga Legpa as one of the teachers of Tsongkhapa (1357-1419), and active in the second half of the fourteenth century, ibid. The inscriptions state that the mandalas were made for Kunga Legpa’s personal use and the paintings may thus be dated to the second half of the fourteenth century. A particular stylistic feature of the Nairatmya and the Raktayamari is the bold vine motif at each side of the mandala palace, with large flowers, buds and tendrils outlined in black in striking contrast with the plain blue background. Close parallels are seen in murals at Riwoche (dPal Ri.bo.che) in the western Tsang region of Latö (La.stod), where mandalas are depicted with similar large flowers and buds outlined in black on a plain blue background, see Roberto Vitali, Early Temples of Central Tibet, London, 1990, pl. 77. Vitali discusses the origin of the Riwoche style, tracing its development from the early fourteenth century murals at Shalu done in a Newar style by Yuan court artists, through those further west at Jonang done around 1330 in a Tibetan hand, cf. the Jonang flower style, ibid., p. 103, fig. 18, the Gyang stupa constructed around 1415, and culminating in the murals at Riwoche completed in 1456 by the ‘Iron Bridge Builder’ Thangtong Gyalpo (1385-1464) and his team of Tibetan artists: Vitali designates the regional style at these three stupas as the La.stod school of art, ibid., pp 128-133. With such compelling stylistic comparisons, Lama Khedsun Kunga Lekpa’s Nairatmya mandala is likely to have been painted in the western Tsang region of Latö sometime in the second half of the fourteenth century. The following notes are the recollections of the collector from the time, over 50 years ago, when she and her late husband acquired the mandala from Stella Kramrisch: ""Around the year 1970 my husband and I were visiting the sculptor Bernie Brenner, who was our good friend. The topic of discussion turned to artworks of the world. Bernie said 'The person you should meet is Stella Kramrisch. She has traveled the world over and really knows/writes about it. She is connected with the University of Pennsylvania and I’ll see if she can come over one day soon.' We were known to carefully buy the art we liked So, we met Stella at Bernie’s. Our conversation led to the art of the Himalayas. Stella said she had in mind a specific mandala that she thought would especially please us: Nairatmya. We met her again- this time with the Nairatmya mandala in hand and we were fascinated- eventually purchasing it from her. Our friendship grew. One time she visited us for dinner. When drinks were offered she chose “fizzies.” Having never tried a fizzy before she was amazed when dropped in water the tablets became carbonated and fruity. Later that evening she said we should visit her and see her collection. Along with the Brenners we visited Stella at her home for dinner. Her collection of woodcuts, large and small sculpture, tapestries and oils was indeed worldwide and timeless. We became so absorbed in conversation she realized that she’d forgotten to turn the oven on for the dinner rolls! Stella was having exhibits at the University of Pennsylvania and the Philadelphia Art Museum. At the latter (in 1978), she requested to show the Nairatmya mandala as part of the Himalayan Art Exhibition. We complied of course. At this exhibit I purchased a tiny Ganesha sculpture." Stella Kramrisch (1896-1993), the previous owner of the mandala, pioneered the field of Indian art in the West, and was a teacher of Indian art history over six decades, first at Calcutta University, then at the Courtauld Institute of Art and finally at the University of Pennsylvania. She served as the curator of Indian Art at the Philadelphia Museum of Art from 1954-1979. Her personal collection of eighth- to twelfth-century Indian temple sculpture, the most significant holdings of its type in any American museum, became part of the museum’s permanent holdings in 1956. Upon her death, she left more than 700 objects to the museum, including a strong group of early paintings and thangkas from Tibet, Nepal, and Bangladesh.

Preview:

Address:

1334 York Avenue, New York, New York 10021, U.S.A.

Start time:

  • Commission  USD
  • 0 ~ Unlimitation26.0%

Online payment is available,

You will be qualified after paid the deposit!

Online payment is available for this session.

Bidding for buyers is available,

please call us for further information. Our hot line is400-010-3636 !

This session is a live auction,

available for online bidding and reserved bidding

×
This session requires a deposit. Please leave your contact. Our staff will contact you. Or you can call400-010-3636 (Mainland China)+86 010-5994 2750 (Overseas) Contact Art Fox Live Customer Service
Contact:
Other Lots in this session 49unit
Tibet,17th century An inscribed gilt-copper alloy figure of ...

LOT 0101

Nepal,dated 1715-16 An inscribed gilt-copper alloy figure of...

LOT 0102

Qing dynasty,18th century A gilt copper alloy figure of Maha...

LOT 0103

Qing dynasty,18th century A gilt-copper alloy figure of Manj...

LOT 0104

Eastern India,Pala period,12th century A copper and silver-i...

LOT 0105

Tibet,13th century A large gilt-copper alloy figure of Vajra...

LOT 0106

Tibet,15th century A gilt-copper alloy figure of Guhyasamaja

LOT 0107

Tibet,15th century The Nyingjei Lam parcel-gilt silver and g...

LOT 0108

Tibet,13th/14th century A copper alloy figure of Marpa

LOT 0109

Tibet,circa 15th century A stone Kagyu hierarch group

LOT 0110

Tibet,17th century A small inscribed silver figure of Sangye...

LOT 0111

Eastern Tibet,18th century A thangka depicting episodes from...

LOT 0112

Western Tibet,11th-12th century A silver and copper alloy co...

LOT 0113

Tibet,16th/17th century A pair of large gold, silver and cop...

LOT 0114

Tibet,15th century A large gilt-copper alloy stupa

LOT 0115

Central Tibet,14th century A thangka of Amitabha with myriad...

LOT 0117

Art Fox Live
Buyers
Auctioneers
Follow Us
Feedback

在线客服

咨询热线

400-010-3636

微信公众号

APP下载

顶部

Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the session is ended.
Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the current bidding is ended.
Hint
宝物的份数已经被购完,下次下手请及时。
Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the session is ended.
Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the session is ended.
Hint
You will not able to bid now when the bid is started or ended.