A MASSIVE AND HIGHLY IMPORTANT GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF VAJRABHAIRAVA EKAVIRA
A MASSIVE AND HIGHLY IMPORTANT GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF VAJRABHAIRAVA EKAVIRA
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A MASSIVE AND HIGHLY IMPORTANT GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF VAJRABHAIRAVA EKAVIRA

MING DYNASTY, FIRST HALF OF 15TH CENTURY

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A MASSIVE AND HIGHLY IMPORTANT GILT-BRONZE FIGURE OF VAJRABHAIRAVA EKAVIRA
MING DYNASTY, FIRST HALF OF 15TH CENTURY
The magnificent, meditational deity strides in alidhasana on animals and prostrate figures over a double-lotus base. In his primary hands, he holds a curved knife pressed to a skull cup, while the others are outstretched and in various gestures. He wears a skirt of beaded festoons and is adorned with various jewellery, snakes, streaming ribbons, and a garland of severed heads. The central buffalo-form head is wrathful in expression, with open mouth and bared fangs, bulging eyes, and flaming brows below horns and a foliate tiara, and is flanked and surmounted by wrathful human faces and the peaceful visage of Manjushri.
38 7/8 in. (98.8 cm.) high
Provenance
Collection G., by 1904
Hôtel Drouot, Oeuvres d'Art de Haute Curiosité du Tibet formant La Première Partie de la Collection G..., Paris, 21-24 November 1904, lot 464 (figs. 1 and 2)
Private collection, France, 1930s, and thence by descent
Exhibited
Himalayan Art Resources (himalayanart.org), item no. 23576

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Lot Essay

This impressively cast and rare monumentally-sized figure of Vajrabhairava is among the largest and most significant works of Tibeto-Chinese sculpture to appear on the market in several years. The unprecedented size and level of detail suggests it was produced in the imperial workshops of Beijing in the 15th century, a period of wide-reaching cultural exchange and religious efflorescence within Ming China. The Yongle Emperor moved the capital from Nanjing to Beijing, which had previously been the capital during the Yuan dynasty, and was still an important Buddhist pilgrimage site for Mongolian Buddhists. The Emperor sponsored the construction of numerous Tibetan Buddhist temples within the capital, and his successors maintained this lavish patronage.

Stylistically, the present lot follows the Nepalese tradition established in Beijing during the Yuan dynasty. The Tibetan Chogyal Pagpa (1235-1280), abbot of Sakya monastery and personal guru to Kublai Khan, invited the esteemed Nepalese artisan, Araniko (also spelled Aniko or Anige), to Beijing, where he was appointed head of the imperially-sponsored atelier. During this time, most of the Buddhist craftsmen working in Beijing were Nepalese or Tibetan, and they followed Tibetan iconographic parameters. During the Ming dynasty, these iconographic and stylistic elements were largely retained, although the greater involvement of Chinese artisans resulted in a gradual sinicization of the style, especially apparent in the present work in the facial features of the prostrate figures.
Vajrabhairava is an important deity in all sects of Tibetan Buddhism, but perhaps none more so than in the Gelug school. The founder of that tradition, Tsongkhapa, popularized the worship of Vajrabhairava in the 14th century, and also systemized his represented iconography; among other aspects, the arrangement of the additional faces in a circular manner around the back of the head became almost exclusively reserved for Gelugpa depictions of the deity. As this feature is present in the current work, one can ascertain that it was created according to Gelugpa principles. Within that tradition, Vajrabhairava is one of the principle meditation deities of the Anuttarayoga practice, alongside Guhyasamaja and Chakrasamvara. He is considered a wrathful manifestation of Manjushri; significantly, Tsongkhapa as well as the Chinese emperor were also considered manifestations of this bodhisattva, explaining in part his popularity within China and Gelug-Tibet.

Among the most impressive of the Chinese-made Buddhist images from this period are a group of monumentally-sized gilt-bronzes, of which the present figure is one of just a handful known. A group of large-scale gilt-bronzes was offered at an important early sale of Asian art at Hôtel Drouot in Paris in 1904. Among the group were two other figures of Vajrabhairava, including one which was dated with a mark to the reign of the Chenghua Emperor, and which was subsequently offered by Rare Art Inc. in 1975 (92 cm. high), and another published in numerous publications and last offered on the market at Sotheby’s New York, 25 March 1999, lot 122. The present work is the largest of the three Vajrabhairava figures, and is the only one to depict the deity without his consort, Vajra Vetali. The other massive gilt-bronze sculptures from the collection include a figure of Mahachakravajrapani, now in the Linden-Museum, Stuttgart; a figure of Guhyasamaja at the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco; a standing bodhisattva now in the Musée Cernuschi, Paris; and a figure of Nilamahakala, the whereabouts of which is now unknown (see U. von Schroeder, Indo-Tibetan Bronzes, Hong Kong, 1981, p. 530, nos. 151B, 151D, 151E and 151A). Also related is a standing figure of Mahakala originally from the Nitta Collection and exhibited at the National Palace Museum (see The Crucible of Compassion and Wisdom: Special Exhibition Catalog of the Buddhist Bronzes from the Nitta Group Collection at the National Palace Museum, Taipei, 1987, p. 126, pl. 32).

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