Skip to main content

This auction has ended. View lot details

You may also be interested in

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

A thangka from an Avadanakalpalata set Central Tibet, 18th/19th century image 1
A thangka from an Avadanakalpalata set Central Tibet, 18th/19th century image 2
A thangka from an Avadanakalpalata set Central Tibet, 18th/19th century image 3
A thangka from an Avadanakalpalata set Central Tibet, 18th/19th century image 4
A thangka from an Avadanakalpalata set Central Tibet, 18th/19th century image 5
Lot 8

A thangka from an Avadanakalpalata set
Central Tibet, 18th/19th century

14 September 2015, 14:00 EDT
New York

Sold for US$18,750 inc. premium

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

How to sell

Looking for a similar item?

Our Indian, Himalayan & Southeast Asian Art specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.

Find your local specialist

Ask about this lot

A thangka from an Avadanakalpalata set

Central Tibet, 18th/19th century
Distemper on cloth; Shakyamuni gazes out from the center of a dynamic landscape filled with descriptive gold inscriptions and narratives.
Image: 36 x 22 5/8 in. (91.5 x 57.5 cm); With silks: 59 1/2 x 31 1/2 in. (151.1 x 80.1 cm)

Footnotes

西藏中部 十八/十九世紀 譬喻集唐卡組畫之一

This thangka belongs to a set illustrating the 108 stories of the Bodhisattvavadanakalpalata. Stylistically, it exemplifies the Lhasa court style of Tsang province, which places a large primary subject at the center of a lively asymmetrical landscape filled with compartmentalized narratives.

Derived from woodblock prints produced at Narthong monastery, three near-identical compositions from similar sets are held in The Palace Museum in Beijing, the former collection of Baron von Stael-Holstein, Beijing, and Tibet House, New Delhi. (See Zangchuan Fojiao Tangka-Gugong Bowuyuan Cang Wenwu Zhenpin Quanji, Hong Kong, 2006, p.70, no.61; Gordon, The Iconography of Tibetan Lamaism, New York, 1972, pl.5-R; and www.himalayanart.org/items/72018, respectively).

The Bodhisattvavadanakalpalata was composed by the 11th-century Kashmiri poet Kshemendra and his son. Drawing inspiration from the ancient Jataka Tales, the moralistic poem recounts the wise and compassionate deeds of Buddha throughout his many lives as a bodhisattva. Each episode is underscored by the practice of the 'six perfections': giving, moral practice, patience, effort, meditation, and wisdom.

This thangka depicts stories 13 to 16. Starting in the bottom right corner and working clockwise, we first see the story of the Yaskshini Haritaka. Here, the Holy One, by hiding her only child from her, teaches the child-eating ogress Hariti the pain she causes others, prompting her to repent. Within the thangka, we see related episodes such as the community of Rajagriha appealing to Buddha; Hariti and her son, Priyamkara, talking to Buddha holding the alms bowl in which he hides Priyamkara; Hariti frantically searching for her son amongst the oceans, mountains, continents, and heavens.

The bottom left corner depicts the Performance of Miracles, wherein Buddha multiplies his form, spreading his pure light for the good of all beings. Six bare-chested Indian religious masters, who tried to goad Buddha into a contest of miraculous powers, are seated on a wooden throne witnessing the Buddha's lotus-borne multiplication (See lot 80 for more information). Below this, Vajrapani chases the Indian masters away.

In the top left corner, we see the Descent from Heaven, where Shakyamuni, Brahma, and Shakra travel down a ladder made of gold, lapis lazuli, and silver from the heavens where Shakyamuni has preached the dharma to the gods. He is seen again seated amongst the people of Samkashya, recounting the merits of the nun Utpalavarna, who attends.

In the top right corner, we see the Destruction of the Boulder, in which Buddha picks up a boulder that the best athletes of Kusha could not lift, and blows it into dust, preaching the concept of 'emptiness' (sunyata). At the top, Buddha tosses the boulder to the heaven of Brahma. For a translation of the Bodhisattvavadanakalpalata, see Black (trans.), Leaves of the Heaven Tree, Berkeley, 1997, pp. 62-81.

The thangka's reverse bears mantras of blessing in Sanskrit using Tibetan script: om sarv vidy svaha // om vajra ayushe svaha. Additionally, the three letters "om, ah, hum," are placed vertically behind the central Buddha at the level of body, speech, and mind.

Referenced:
HAR - himalayanart.org/items/31531

Provenance:
Private Danish Collection, acquired in Nepal, 1966

Additional information

Bid now on these items

TÊTE DE BODHISATTVA EN STUC Ancienne région du Gandhara, IIIe-Ve siècle

TÊTE DE BOUDDHA EN SCHISTE Ancienne région du Gandhara, IVe siècle

STATUE DE BOUDDHA EN SCHISTE GRIS Ancienne région du Gandhara, II-IIIe siècle

TÊTE DE BOUDDHA EN STUC Ancienne région du Gandhara, IVe-Ve siècle

PANNEAU EN RELIEF EN SCHISTE GRIS REPRÉSENTANT POSSIBLEMENT LA GRANDE RENONCIATION OU L'INTERPRÉTATION DU RÊVE DE MAYA AU ROI SUDDHODANA Ancienne région du Gandhara, IIe-IIIe siècle

STATUETTE DE DIVINITÉ FÉMININE DEBOUT EN TERRE CUITE Inde, Période Maurya-Sunga, IIe-Ier siècle avant J.C.

STÈLE DE FIGURE DEBOUT TENANT UN ARC ET DES FLÈCHES EN GRÈS ROUGE Inde centrale, Madhya Pradesh, Style Khajuraho, XIe siècle

IMPORTANTE STATUE DE DÉESSE EN BRONZE Inde, Tamil Nadu, époque Vijayanagara, XVI siècle

SANCTUAIRE DE SURYA EN ALLIAGE DE CUIVRE Inde, Bengale, époque Pala, Xe siècle

STÈLE DE VISHNU EN PIERRE NOIRE Inde occidentale, Rajasthan ou Gujarat, ca. XIIe-XIIIe siècle

STÈLE EN PIERRE NOIRE REPRÉSENTANT DURGA TUANT LE DÉMON MAHISHA Bangladesh, XIe-XIIe siècle

STATUETTE DE DURGA MAHISHASURAMARDINI EN ALLIAGE DE CUIVRE AVEC TRACES DE POLYCHROMIE Inde, province d'Assam, XVIIe siècle

POIGNARD EN ACIER DAMASQUINÉ D'OR, KATAR DJAMADHAR Inde, moghole, Rajasthan, XIXe siècle

CLOCHE RITUELLE EN BRONZE Indonésie, Java, XIe siècle

RELIQUAIRE EN BRONZE Thaïlande, Sukhothai, XIVe-XVe siècle

BUSTE DE BOUDDHA COURONNÉ EN TERRE CUITE Thaïlande, Haripunjaya, XIIIe siècle

GRANDE CLOCHE DE TEMPLE EN BRONZE Datée de 1206 de l'ère birmane, ou 1844

ÉPÉE À POIGNÉE EN ARGENT NIELLO, DHA, ET SON FOURREAU Birmanie, XIXe siècle

STUPA EN ARGENT Thaïlande, époque Ayutthaya, XVIIe siècle

TÊTE DE BOUDDHA EN BRONZE Thaïlande, époque Ayutthaya, XVe-XVIe siècle

STATUETTE DE BOUDDHA MARAVIJAYA COURONNÉ EN BRONZE Nord de la Thaïlande, époque Lan Na, XVIe siècle

STATUE DE BOUDHA EN BRONZE DORÉ Thaïlande, Bangkok, XIXe siècle

STATUE DE VISHNU CHEVALANT GARUDA EN BOIS SCULPTÉ Thaïlande, XIXe siècle

STATUETTE DE MANJUSHRI AVEC SHAKTI EN ALLIAGE DE CUIVRE DORÉ Népal, XVIIe siècle