Circa 100 AD to 300 AD
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Dimensions 15.5″ (39.4cm) high x 7.7″ (19.6cm) wide
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Medium Stucco
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Origin Afghanistan/Pakistan
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Stucco sculpture of a
Buddha standing in classical iconic posture, his head tilted forward,eyes
half-closed, earlobes extended, holding the hem of his robe in his left hand,
staring below with a serene, emotionless gaze with a gentle smile and casting
his eyes downward to his devotees, in a gesture of apparent compassion.
His sharp wavy hair is
drawn up over his usnisa into a chignon, which together with his long ear lobes
are distinctive features (laksanas) of his buddhahood. The historical Buddha
cut off his hair whilst renouncing the world and therefore would not have
sported the ornately styled hair depicted here, but a traditional monk's
tonsure. The influence on the treatment of the hairstyle, is therefore more
Hellenistic than Indic, evident in the artfully arranged chignon, a recurrent
feature in early Greek sculptures, also known as krobilos.
The Gandhara region
had long been a crossroads of cultural influences. Geographically it included
roughly northwestern India between the Khyber Pass and the Indus River and the
region of the Kabul Valley in Afghanistan. During the reign of the Indian
emperor Ashoka around 3rd century B.C., the region became the scene of
intensive Buddhist missionary activity; and, in the 1st century AD, rulers of
the Kushan empire such as Kanishka (AD 129-160) maintained contacts with Rome
and employed foreign artists from the eastern centres of the Roman Empire to
realise many sculptural works. The many archaeological discoveries of
Alexandrian and Syrian workmanship at Taxila in the Punjab and Begram in the
Kabul valley testify to the cultural and diplomatic connections with the
Graeco-Roman West. Many artifacts, in particular sculptures, have survived and
are now dispersed in major museums throughout the world.
The treatment of the
robe of our stucco Buddha,imitating a classical himation, is intensely
naturalistic, as the folds are shallowed to accommodate his expanded chest,
demonstrating the mastership of the Gandharan sculptors. In between the pleats
of his garment are traces of the original red pigment that would have once
covered the whole surface, reminiscent of the elaborate chromatic palette these
stucco statues would have originally been painted with. Both the sharp
treatment of the folds, the Buddha's exceptional strength of expression and his
hair fashioned into copious half-moon shaped waves would indicate an early date
around the 2nd century AD.
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