Inventory no.: 1991

Tibet Chorten

SOLD

Brass Chorten

Tibet

15th-16th century

height: 14.5cm

This cast brass Tibetan stupa or chorten has a lotus petal base; bell-shaped body; cruciform or mandala-shaped entablature (or harmika); and an upper section of thirteen ribs to represent thirteen graduated parasols, topped with a circular lotus petal platform surmounted by a lotus-bud finial. Edges are variously beaded. The base is closed with the original brass plate which is engraved with a double vajra symbol.

The contours of the piece are rounded from years of handling.

Such stupas are meant to symbolise the Buddha’s enlightened mind. Many are also meant to hold offerings and precious relics. Tibetan stupas of this form are associated with Atisha who came to Tibet from India in the eleventh century and founded the Kadampa sect, and it is with members of this sect – the Kadampas – with whom this style of stupa is most associated. The form, in Tibet, dates back to at least the twelfth century.

According to Heller (2008, p. 156) such stupas frequently were installed on the altars of many Tibetan monasteries from Ladakh to Eastern Tibet. Most were designed to hold consecrated items including small images of a lama or the Buddha.

References

Heller, A.,

Early Himalayan Art, Ashmolean Museum, 2008.

Lipton, B., & N.D. Ragnubs,

Treasures of Tibetan Art: Collections of the Jacques Marchais Museum of Tibetan Art, Oxford University Press, 1996.

Pal, P.,

Art of the Himalayas: Treasures from Nepal and Tibet, Hudson Hills Press, 1991.

Provenance

UK art market.

Inventory no.: 1991

SOLD