Sold for €8,450
including Buyer's Premium
Expert’s note: The closely related buddha, listed below in the auction result comparison and published in Saburo Matsubara’s book Chogoku Bukkyo Chokokushi Kenkyu (History Chinese Buddhist Sculpture), Tokyo, 1961, holds unique similarities to the present figure. For one, the hair of both Buddha curl in an identical manner around the central ushnisha, which is slightly recessed. The robes also are configured similarly, tied at the waist in a similar pattern and folding below the feet in a near identical fashion. This comparison places the present figure firmly within the 10th century.
Finely cast seated in dhyanasana, his left hand raised in a rare mudra with the ring finger bent and the others extended, his right hand resting on his knee. He is wearing loose-fitting robes opening at the chest. His serene face with heavy-lidded eyes below arched brows as well as full lips flanked by long pendulous earlobes. His hair arranged in deeply incised wavy locks over the high ushnisha.
Provenance: From the private collection of Michael Phillips, acquired through the Japanese trade. Michael Phillips (born 1943) is an Academy Award-winning film producer. Born in Brooklyn, New York, his parents were Lawrence and Shirley Phillips, noted New York dealers in Asian fine art, selling to the Met, the LACMA, the Chicago Art Institute, and the British Museum among others. Michael Phillips is a collector of Asian art himself, particularly Indian, Southeast Asian, and Himalayan sculpture. His most important films include The Sting (winning the Academy Award for Best Picture in 1973), Taxi Driver (winning the Palme d’Or at the 1976 Cannes Film Festival), and Steven Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
Condition: Very good condition, commensurate with age, showing expected old wear overall. Signs of weathering and erosion, remnants of gilding, small nicks here and there. The naturally grown dark patina with cuprite and malachite encrustations. Aureole and lotus base (see auction result comparison below) are lost.
Weight: 185 g
Dimensions: 8.2 cm
Expert’s note: The closely related buddha, listed below in the auction result comparison and published in Saburo Matsubara’s book Chogoku Bukkyo Chokokushi Kenkyu (History Chinese Buddhist Sculpture), Tokyo, 1961, holds unique similarities to the present figure. For one, the hair of both Buddha curl in an identical manner around the central ushnisha, which is slightly recessed. The robes also are configured similarly, tied at the waist in a similar pattern and folding below the feet in a near identical fashion. This comparison places the present figure firmly within the 10th century.
Finely cast seated in dhyanasana, his left hand raised in a rare mudra with the ring finger bent and the others extended, his right hand resting on his knee. He is wearing loose-fitting robes opening at the chest. His serene face with heavy-lidded eyes below arched brows as well as full lips flanked by long pendulous earlobes. His hair arranged in deeply incised wavy locks over the high ushnisha.
Provenance: From the private collection of Michael Phillips, acquired through the Japanese trade. Michael Phillips (born 1943) is an Academy Award-winning film producer. Born in Brooklyn, New York, his parents were Lawrence and Shirley Phillips, noted New York dealers in Asian fine art, selling to the Met, the LACMA, the Chicago Art Institute, and the British Museum among others. Michael Phillips is a collector of Asian art himself, particularly Indian, Southeast Asian, and Himalayan sculpture. His most important films include The Sting (winning the Academy Award for Best Picture in 1973), Taxi Driver (winning the Palme d’Or at the 1976 Cannes Film Festival), and Steven Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
Condition: Very good condition, commensurate with age, showing expected old wear overall. Signs of weathering and erosion, remnants of gilding, small nicks here and there. The naturally grown dark patina with cuprite and malachite encrustations. Aureole and lotus base (see auction result comparison below) are lost.
Weight: 185 g
Dimensions: 8.2 cm
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