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Northern Qi Stone Standing Bodhisattva

SKU HK.5127
Circa

550 AD to 577 AD

Dimensions

38″ (96.5cm) high x 10″ (25.4cm) wide

Medium

Stone

Origin

China

Gallery Location

Hong Kong


 

This sculpture of a Bodhisattva has an oval face and a small full mouth. The features are highly stylized, the eyes are elongated, under arched brows. The chin is rounded, and slightly double chinned. The neck is smooth and columnar, with no fat rings, as are found more commonly after the Northern Qi. Standing barefoot on a pedestal, his hands should have formed the abhaya and varada mudra respectively. The Bodhisattva’s exquisite and decorated crown, robe and keyura are elegant and clearly carved. The flesh part of the figure is gilt with gold, while hints of red paints on his crown are still visible.
Bodhisattva figures of related type became popular through the patronage of the Northern Wei imperial family, who commissioned the carving of rock caves in Longmen and Gongxian, both in Henan province, in the first quarter of the 6th century, which typically show seated or standing Buddhas flanked by two bodhisattvas. Besides these massive stone carvings in cave temples, many free- standing steles, also often with two such Bodhisattva figures on either side of a central Buddha statue, were commissioned in that century, which followed the artistic language introduced by these grand Buddhist cave sculpture projects, which exerted an overwhelming influence on Chinese sculpture of the period in general. This majestic figure of a Bodhisattva has fine, even facial features, with particular attention paid to its elegant, decoratively stylized crown and garment with loose scarves and knotted ribbons. The low- relief carving style and almost complete disregard for the shape of the body under the garments is characteristic of the Northern Qi period. Unlike the subsequent Sui style, sculptors during Northern Dynasties period were less interested in rendering the three- dimensional physical side of a deity figure than in capturing its spiritual message through delicate facial features and gestures. – (HK.5127)

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