Object Details
Culture
China
Liu Song period (420–479)
Date
444 AD
Medium
Bronze
Dimensions
7 7/16 x 7 x 3 3/8 inches (18.9 x 17.8 x 8.5 cm)
Credit Line
George and Mary Rockwell Collection
Object
Number
96.016
This small bronze altarpiece depicts the Buddha seated in a meditating pose before a flaming halo, h(…)
This small bronze altarpiece depicts the Buddha seated in a meditating pose before a flaming halo, his hands placed in front and his crossed legs hidden under an apron-like fold of drapery. The head and hands are oversized, in keeping with early iconographic standards. Those standards and the stylistic conventions for implementing them were developed first in the ancient region of Gandhara, in northwest India, during the second century. Portable bronzes like this example helped spread both the Gandhara style and the Buddhist doctrine of compassion and salvation throughout China. Cast into the back of the halo is a dedicatory inscription that dates the image to 444 A.D. Two decades later, under state patronage, the rock-cut sanctuaries of Buddhism began on an immense scale at several mountain sites in northern China. Unlike these later testimonials to permanence and enduring power, the smaller portable bronzes like the Cornell example evoked feelings of gentleness, grace, and intimacy, qualities that initially did much to help launch the religion and prepare the way for the later, more awe-inspiring works in stone. (From “A Handbook of the Collection: Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art,” 1998)