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1054
1590344

A sandstone sculpture of a Luohan, Yuanstyle.

Estimate
12 000 - 15 000 SEK
1 070 - 1 330 EUR
1 100 - 1 380 USD
Bidding requires special pre approval.
Purchasing info
What will the transport cost?

Packaging and insurance

All items sent from Bukowskis are fully insured and carefully inserted in discreet packaging to protect your unique item.

How do I book a transport?

When the payment is settled, you're welcome to book transport on My Pages

When will my item be delivered?

Your order will be prepared within 2-5 days after the transport is booked. You will receive a message by mail, text or phone when your item is on its way. Please note, when making payment via Klarna, that the address for home delivery must be the same as your invoicing address.

For condition report contact specialist
Cecilia Nordström
Stockholm
Cecilia Nordström
Senior specialist Asian Ceramics and Works of Art, European Ceramics and Glass
+46 (0)739 40 08 02
A sandstone sculpture of a Luohan, Yuanstyle.

Expressively carved with a serene expression and deep-cut lines, beneath a large bulbous nose and slanting narrow eyes, all between large pendulous ears, the stone reddish beige. Height head 34.5 cm. Height with stand 44 cm.

Wear.

Provenance

Property of a private Swedish collector, long term member of the Swedish Oriental Ceramics Society, who started to collect in the early 1980's.

Literature

Animated like portraits of luohans occurs sometimes in the Sichuan Province, which has a long tradition of depicting lively, caricature-like effigies of humans, as is evident in some of its pottery figures of entertainers, such as a figure of the grimacing drummer in the Sichuan Provincial Museum; see R.Bagley, Ancient Sichuan: Treasures from a Lost Civilization, Seattle, 2001, p.298, no.111. A more naturalistic trend in sculpture was initiated by Song dynasty sculptors, who also often depicted human figures with animated, expressive faces. This trend continued into the subsequent Yuan and Ming dynasties. Two sandstone sculptures of arhats, one with a tiger, the other with a dragon, were discovered in 1980 at the Boshan Temple site in Fu county, Shaanxi Province; see H.Rogers, China 5000 Years: Innovation and Transformation in the Arts, New York, 1998, no.177.