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A RARE WHITE MARBLE FIGURE OF A LOKAPALA TANG DYNASTY, 8TH CENTURY
Description
Provenance
Catalogue Note
Marble figures of the Tang dynasty are extremely rare and only a very small number of examples can be found in museum and private collections. The majority of Tang figures are earthenware, while marble was possibly reserved for special religious statues. Traces of the original gilding and painted colour are still visible confirming the lavish decoration of sculptures of this type.
See a comparable pair of marble guardian figures, excavated at Xi'an, Shaanxi province, included in the exhibition China. Dawn of a Golden Age 200-750 A.D., the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2004, cat.no. 231. See also two figures of hunters also carved of white marble, recovered from the tomb of Yang Sixu who was buried in A.D. 740 in Dengjiapocun near Xi'an, and today preserved in the Museum of Chinese History, Beijing, illustrated in Zhongguo meishu quanji. Diaosu bian, vol. 4, Beijing, 1988, pls. 142 and 143, together with a much larger marble guardian figure lacking its head and one arm, in the Shaanxi Provincial Museum, pl. 86.
Lokapala or Heavenly Guardians were protectors of the four directions who reside on Mount Sumeru in Buddhist cosmology. In Buddhist temples they were placed at the four corners of the altar to protect Buddha. They were sculpted as formidable warriors wearing a military garb, standing in a threatening pose with a fierce facial expression to rouse fear in their adversaries.