Sold for €3,120
including Buyer's Premium
Finely worked, the round face with large bulging eyes incised with pupils below flame-like brows centered by the third eye, the pierced mouth agape revealing teeth and fangs, framed by a thick curly beard, and the ear suspending a snake-form earring, all below a tiara of skulls centered by a gemstone-inlaid glass bead.
Provenance: Andrew Rogers, New York, 1983. A private collection in Illinois, United States, acquired from the above and thence by descent. A copy of an invoice from Andrew Rogers, dated 5 April 1983, describing the piece as a ‘Smaller 17th c. Nepalese Bhairab [sic] mask’ and stating a purchase price for the present lot of USD 1,300 or approx. EUR 3,800 (converted and adjusted for inflation at the time of writing), accompanies this lot. The reverse and stand each with an old collector’s label. Andrew R. Rogers is an American collector of Himlayan art who has lived in Asia for the majority of his life. He is also a world-renowned authority on Himalayan furniture since the early 1970s.
Condition: Good condition with old wear, few dents, small nicks, light surface scratches, obvious losses, remnants of pigments, and encrustations. The gemstone-inlaid glass bead to the crown is a later addition.
Weight: 73.1 g (excl. base), 473.3 g (incl. base)
Dimensions: Height 10.6 cm (excl. base), 15.5 cm (incl. base)
With an associated stand. (2)
Newari masks such as the present lot were also constructed in wood and terracotta. Larger examples were never actually worn but kept on display and used during a special annual festival dedicated to Indra, the Indra Jatra. On the third night of the festival, local beer or spirits were poured through a spout placed through the mouth of the mask for revelers who would imbibe the liquid under the auspices of receiving a divine blessing.
Literature comparison:
Compare a related Newari gilt bronze mask of Bhairava, dated 19th century, 16.5 cm tall, in the USC Pacific Asia Museum, accession number 1990.52.4.
Auction result comparison:
Type: Related
Auction: Christie’s New York, 21 March 2018, lot 307
Price: USD 30,000 or approx. EUR 34,500 converted and adjusted for inflation at the time of writing
Description: A gilt-copper repousse mask of Bhairava, Nepal, 16th century
Expert remark: Compare the closely related subject and repoussé work, the deity modeled with similar features. Note the much larger size (41.5 cm).
Finely worked, the round face with large bulging eyes incised with pupils below flame-like brows centered by the third eye, the pierced mouth agape revealing teeth and fangs, framed by a thick curly beard, and the ear suspending a snake-form earring, all below a tiara of skulls centered by a gemstone-inlaid glass bead.
Provenance: Andrew Rogers, New York, 1983. A private collection in Illinois, United States, acquired from the above and thence by descent. A copy of an invoice from Andrew Rogers, dated 5 April 1983, describing the piece as a ‘Smaller 17th c. Nepalese Bhairab [sic] mask’ and stating a purchase price for the present lot of USD 1,300 or approx. EUR 3,800 (converted and adjusted for inflation at the time of writing), accompanies this lot. The reverse and stand each with an old collector’s label. Andrew R. Rogers is an American collector of Himlayan art who has lived in Asia for the majority of his life. He is also a world-renowned authority on Himalayan furniture since the early 1970s.
Condition: Good condition with old wear, few dents, small nicks, light surface scratches, obvious losses, remnants of pigments, and encrustations. The gemstone-inlaid glass bead to the crown is a later addition.
Weight: 73.1 g (excl. base), 473.3 g (incl. base)
Dimensions: Height 10.6 cm (excl. base), 15.5 cm (incl. base)
With an associated stand. (2)
Newari masks such as the present lot were also constructed in wood and terracotta. Larger examples were never actually worn but kept on display and used during a special annual festival dedicated to Indra, the Indra Jatra. On the third night of the festival, local beer or spirits were poured through a spout placed through the mouth of the mask for revelers who would imbibe the liquid under the auspices of receiving a divine blessing.
Literature comparison:
Compare a related Newari gilt bronze mask of Bhairava, dated 19th century, 16.5 cm tall, in the USC Pacific Asia Museum, accession number 1990.52.4.
Auction result comparison:
Type: Related
Auction: Christie’s New York, 21 March 2018, lot 307
Price: USD 30,000 or approx. EUR 34,500 converted and adjusted for inflation at the time of writing
Description: A gilt-copper repousse mask of Bhairava, Nepal, 16th century
Expert remark: Compare the closely related subject and repoussé work, the deity modeled with similar features. Note the much larger size (41.5 cm).
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