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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 62

A GROUP OF FOUR GILT-SILVER REPOUSSÉ-MOUNTED AND TURQUOISE-EMBELLISHED BURLWOOD 'BAJIXIANG' OFFERING BOWLS

Schätzpreis
10.000 $ - 15.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 62

A GROUP OF FOUR GILT-SILVER REPOUSSÉ-MOUNTED AND TURQUOISE-EMBELLISHED BURLWOOD 'BAJIXIANG' OFFERING BOWLS

Schätzpreis
10.000 $ - 15.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

A GROUP OF FOUR GILT-SILVER REPOUSSÉ-MOUNTED AND TURQUOISE-EMBELLISHED BURLWOOD 'BAJIXIANG' OFFERING BOWLSTibet, 19th century or later Each burlwood bowl supported on a short stem foot and rising to an everted rim, the interior lined with sheet silver extending over the rim, the well applied with a turquoise bead set in a gilt-copper mount, the lower body and foot mounted with silver sheet worked in repoussé and chased details, the principal features picked out in gilt, including three small bowls each with a 'floral' roundel at the base and the bajixiang at the lower body, and one large bowl with a beribboned Dharma wheel at the base and beribboned bajixiang at the lower body. 6 1/2in (16.5cm) diam. of largest (4).FootnotesProvenance: Asian Private Collection, until 1988, by repute Acquired from the above, 1988 Water bowls are used in Tibetan Buddhist rituals to place offerings of water on the altar. Typically appearing in a group of seven, the bowls are organized in a row and filled with water each morning as offerings to the Buddha and bodhisattvas. This devotional practice is known as the Seven Water Offerings (mchod yon, or yon chab 'bul ba). The bowls can be made entirely of metal, or with a wood core and applied silver mounts, as seen in the present examples. The metal can be worked in a variety of techniques including repoussé, chasing, cast or pierced openwork, gilding, hardstone inlay, or a combination thereof, and the motifs tend to favor the 'Eight Buddhist Emblems', auspicious animals, lotus, and foliate scroll. For an overview of vessels used in Tibetan Buddhist offerings, see Michael Henss, Buddhist Ritual Art of Tibet: A Handbook on Ceremonial Objects and Ritual Furnishings in the Tibetan Temple, Stuttgart, 2020, p. 126. For contemporaneous water bowls executed with a silver body embellished with gilt-copper bands, see Marylin M. Rhie and Robert A. F. Thurman, A Shrine for Tibet, The Alice Kadell Collection, New York, 2009, p. 244, no. VI-10.

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 62
Auktion:
Datum:
14.12.2022
Auktionshaus:
Bonhams London
14 December 2022 | Los Angeles
Beschreibung:

A GROUP OF FOUR GILT-SILVER REPOUSSÉ-MOUNTED AND TURQUOISE-EMBELLISHED BURLWOOD 'BAJIXIANG' OFFERING BOWLSTibet, 19th century or later Each burlwood bowl supported on a short stem foot and rising to an everted rim, the interior lined with sheet silver extending over the rim, the well applied with a turquoise bead set in a gilt-copper mount, the lower body and foot mounted with silver sheet worked in repoussé and chased details, the principal features picked out in gilt, including three small bowls each with a 'floral' roundel at the base and the bajixiang at the lower body, and one large bowl with a beribboned Dharma wheel at the base and beribboned bajixiang at the lower body. 6 1/2in (16.5cm) diam. of largest (4).FootnotesProvenance: Asian Private Collection, until 1988, by repute Acquired from the above, 1988 Water bowls are used in Tibetan Buddhist rituals to place offerings of water on the altar. Typically appearing in a group of seven, the bowls are organized in a row and filled with water each morning as offerings to the Buddha and bodhisattvas. This devotional practice is known as the Seven Water Offerings (mchod yon, or yon chab 'bul ba). The bowls can be made entirely of metal, or with a wood core and applied silver mounts, as seen in the present examples. The metal can be worked in a variety of techniques including repoussé, chasing, cast or pierced openwork, gilding, hardstone inlay, or a combination thereof, and the motifs tend to favor the 'Eight Buddhist Emblems', auspicious animals, lotus, and foliate scroll. For an overview of vessels used in Tibetan Buddhist offerings, see Michael Henss, Buddhist Ritual Art of Tibet: A Handbook on Ceremonial Objects and Ritual Furnishings in the Tibetan Temple, Stuttgart, 2020, p. 126. For contemporaneous water bowls executed with a silver body embellished with gilt-copper bands, see Marylin M. Rhie and Robert A. F. Thurman, A Shrine for Tibet, The Alice Kadell Collection, New York, 2009, p. 244, no. VI-10.

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 62
Auktion:
Datum:
14.12.2022
Auktionshaus:
Bonhams London
14 December 2022 | Los Angeles
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