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28 février 2016

An important black ground painting of Mahakala Brahmanarupa, Tibet, late 17th century

An important black ground painting of Mahakala Brahmanarupa, Tibet, late 17th century

Lot 201. An important black ground painting of Mahakala Brahmanarupa, Tibet, late 17th centuryEstimate US$ 400,000 – $600,000. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2016

The great dark-skinned deity in the guise of an old Indian Brahman, seated over a prone corpse on a lotus base at center and surrounded by the fiery flames of pristine awareness, holding aloft his thigh-bone trumpet, flanked by deities from his retinue, with Begtse at below center and a lama and Vaishravana in the corners, with figures from the Sakya lineage above, each identified by inscription in a beautiful hand, very finely painted with lavish use of color against the black background - 58 x 38 in. (147.3 x 96.5 cm.)

Provenance: Zimmerman Family Collection, by the 1990s

LiteratureM. Rhie, et al., Wisdom and Compassion: The Sacred Art of Tibet, 2000, p.447, fig.201 (77a)
N. Bazin, Rituels Tibétains: Visions Secrétes du Ve Dalai Lama, 2002, p.105, cat.46
Himalayan Art Resources (himalayanart.org) item no.31363 

ExhibitedWisdom and Compassion:
Kunst und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutchland, Bonn, Germany, May 9 – August 25, 1996; Centre Cultural de la Fundacion ‘la Caixa”, Barcelona, Spain, October 1 1996 – 14 January 1997; Tobu Museum of Art, Tokyo, Japan, February – April 1997; The Yamaguchi Prefectural Museum of Art, Yamaguchi City, Japan, May – July 1997; Chiba City Museum of Art, Chiba City, Japan, August – September 1997; Sun Yat Sen Memorial Hall, Taipei, Taiwan, January – March 1998; Koihsiung Museum of Fine Art, Kaohsiung, Taiwan, March – May 1998; Taiwan Museum of Art, Taiwan, June - August 1998
Rituels Tibétains: Visions Secrétes du Ve Dalai Lama, Musee National des Arts Asiatiques - Guimet, 5 November 2002 - 24 February 2003

Notes: As described by Marilyn Rhie and Robert Thurman, “This is the finest and largest thangka yet to surface of Brahmanarupa” (Wisdom and Compassion, The Sacred Art of Tibet, 1996, p. 447, cat. no. 201). This unique form of Mahakala appears as an Indian Brahman, dark blue-black in color, with bushy hair, eyebrows and beard befitting asadhu living in the forest. He wears a green dhoti and multiple sashes secured around his waist by a bone-ornament girdle, and a human skin draped over his shoulders. He is adorned by further bone ornaments around his ankles, arms and torso, a white bone mala around his wrist, a skull tiara, and a belled sacred thread, all befitting his sadhu holy status. He holds a thigh-bone trumpet aloft, a skullcup against his left thigh, and a spear against his left shoulder flying a banner decorated with Chinese “long-life” symbols. Next to him are a golden vase with curved knife and a sword. 

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