A GILT-COPPER REPOUSSÉ FIGURE OF GUANDI AND TWO ATTENDANTS
A GILT-COPPER REPOUSSÉ FIGURE OF GUANDI AND TWO ATTENDANTS
A GILT-COPPER REPOUSSÉ FIGURE OF GUANDI AND TWO ATTENDANTS
4 更多
A GILT-COPPER REPOUSSÉ FIGURE OF GUANDI AND TWO ATTENDANTS
7 更多
北美重要私人珍藏
清十八/十九世紀 鎏金銅錘揲關聖帝君三尊像

18TH-19TH CENTURY

細節
清十八/十九世紀 鎏金銅錘揲關聖帝君三尊像
Overall: 15 ½ in. (39.4 cm.) high, three cloth boxes
來源
重要亞洲私人珍藏,入藏於1993年前
出版
鴻禧美術館,《金銅佛造像圖錄》,台北,1993年,頁186-91,圖版86,87及88

榮譽呈獻

Rufus Chen (陳嘉安)
Rufus Chen (陳嘉安) Head of Sale, AVP, Specialist

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拍品專文

The present group represents Guandi, the God of War, flanked by his attendants Guanping and Zhoucang. Guandi is the deified name of Guanyu, who was the renowned third-century general of the state of Shu and was popularized by the fourteenth-century historical novel Sanguo Yan Yi (Romance of the Three Kingdoms). He is reputed to have been killed in AD 219 along with his adopted son Guanping and his trusted general Zhoucang in Jingzhou by the army of Sunquan, ruler of the state of Wu. By the Sui dynasty, Guanyu had become deified. While his actions are reputed to be overly exaggerated in later accounts of his life, Guandi remains one of the most popular Chinese historical figures, and to this day is worshipped by Daoist and Buddhist practitioners as a guardian deity.

According to the entry for the present figure of Guanping in Buddhist Images in Gilt Metal, Taipei, 1993, p. 188, “Guanping was very handsome and is conventionally portrayed with a white face, in contract to Zhoucang who is portrayed with a black face.”

A related gilt-bronze group of slightly smaller size (12 ½ in.), dated to the 18th century, was sold at Christie’s Paris, 12 June 2019, lot 189. See, also, the similarly depicted gilt-bronze figure of Guandi, dated 17th-18th century, sold at Christie’s New York, 24 March 2004, lot 84.

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