Details
712 in. (19.1 cm.) high
Provenance
Collection of Dr. Robert and Mrs. Patricia Jacobsen, Minnesota, acquired in 1987.
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Lot Essay

The present triad represents Buddha Muchalinda flanked on either side by the male bodhisattva of compassion, Lokeshvara, and the female bodhisattva of wisdom, Prajnaparamita. The Buddha, seated on a serpentine lotus base and sheltered by the hood of the seven-headed Muchalinda, holds his hands in dhyanamudra. The four-armed Lokeshvara stands to his left, carrying a rosary, book, amrita vase, and a lotus bud. On the right, Prajnaparamita holds a book and a lotus bud. The three figures are all dressed in similarly-styled jewelry, including their collar necklaces, armbands, bracelets, anklets, and waistbands supporting their respective sampots. The separately cast figures are placed upon a stepped base decorated with architectural relief. Such triads representing Buddha with Lokeshvara and Prajnaparamita were most common during the reign of Jayavarman VII (1181-1218), while Mahayana Buddhism was predominant in Khmer culture. Compare the present lot to a similar bronze group sold at Christie’s Paris, 11 December, 2013, lot 345.

The works of art from the collection of Dr. Robert and Mrs. Patricia Jacobsen in this sale and others of Asian Art Week Online reflect their interest in various areas of Asian art. This seems especially appropriate for Dr. Jacobsen, who has had a long and distinguished career in the field of Asian art, as a scholar, teacher, lecturer, and most notably as the Chair of Asian Art and Curator of Chinese, Indian, Himalayan, Southeast Asian and Islamic Art Department at the Minneapolis Institute of Art.

During his tenure at the Minneapolis Institute of Art, which began in 1976 when Dr. Jacobsen was made the founding curator of the Department of Asian Art, what started as a 900-piece collection, primarily of ancient bronzes and Japanese prints, grew to a collection of 14,500 objects. He has organized and curated numerous exhibitions including Japanese Art: Selections from the Mary and Jackson Burke Collection (1977); The Art of Japanese Screen Painting (1984); Classical Chinese Furniture in the Minneapolis Institute of Arts (1999); Imperial Silks: Ching Dynasty Textiles in the Minneapolis Institute of Arts (2000); and Appreciating China: Gifts from Ruth and Bruce Dayton (2002). He has written more than thirty scholarly articles and books on Asian art; most recently he was the author of Celestial Horses & Long Sleeve Dancers: The David W. Dewey Collection of Ancient Chinese Tomb Sculpture. His particular interests have been early Chinese art, Chinese architecture and classical Chinese furniture. It is the latter two interests, combined with the enthusiastic support of Ruth and Bruce Dayton, that led to the creation of one of the great public collections of classical Chinese furniture and scholar’s objects, and the galleries that house and highlight them, including a 400-year old Ming-dynasty reception hall and a Qing-dynasty scholar’s studio from 1797, which Dr. Jacobsen brought back from China.

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