CROWNED BUDDHA

CROWNED BUDDHA

The Buddha is seated in Dhyanasana on a double-lotus throne, his left hand in Dhyanamudra and his right hand in Bhumisparsamudra. He is clad in a diaphanous Sanghati with a beaded and incised double border that is draped gently over the arm, and neatly folded under the ankles. A thunderbolt sceptre, Vajra, rests on the throne in front of his feet as a symbol of his enlightened mind. He has a wide serene face with elongated eyes, a gentle smile, with a raised Urna on the forehead, the neck with three horizontal lines, and the ears with pendulous pierced lobes. His head is adorned with an elaborate foliate crown, his tight curling hair surmounted by an Ushnisha.

Details

  • Title : CROWNED BUDDHA
  • Year : 16th Century
  • Classification : Sculpture
  • Medium : Gilt-bronze with applied pigment
  • Dimension : 10 in. (25.4 cm.)
  • Accession No : GNM_LOT 40_PUN_34
  • Country/ Geo-location : Nepal
  • Collection : PUNDOLE’S
  • Status : LIVE AUCTION The Art of the Himalayas from the Collection of Roshan Sabavala (M0009) (as per DEC 2021)
  • ESTIMATED : ₹1,000,000 - ₹1,500,000
  • SOLD : ₹4,500,000
  • NOTE : While Buddhas are distinguished by thirty-two physical characteristics on the body, only a few of these appear in sculptures, the most popular being the top knot, ushnisha, the dot between the eyes, urna, the three curved horizontal lines on the neck, and a Dharma Wheel impression on the soles of the feet and the palms of the hands. All five are visible in the current sculpture. The Crowned Buddha is a form of Sakyamuni Buddha, with the one addition of an elaborate crown, similar to one a king would wear. The difference between the Sakyamuni Crowned Buddha and the Five Symbolic Buddhas is that he does not wear any rich adornments or jewellery. He still maintains his austere appearance, nirmanakaya, with the crown being the only addition. For additional examples of Crowned Buddhas see lots 30 and 72.