Weer een vervolg op die mooie Gandhara-kunst.
Ik zag deze collectie in het Provincial Museum of Gansu in Lanzhou.
China, Lanzhou, Provincial Museum of Gansu, Fragment of a canopy depicting four kinnaras among lotus, 2nd – 3rd century, Peshawar District, National Museum of Pakistan, Karachi, grey schist.
A donor figure with a candle, 2nd – 3rd century, Swat District, National Museum of Pakistan, Karachi, schist.
Kiss scene, 3rd – 4th century, Butkara, Swat District, Swat Museum, soap stone.
Monk holding a lamp, 2nd – 3rd century, Peshawar District, National Museum of Pakistan, Karachi, schist. Op de voet staat: ‘Bhiksu Dharmadeva’s statue’.
Wikipedia:
bhikṣu, commonly translated as “monk,” has at least three possible meanings:
(1) someone who begs;
(2) someone who has taken the highest level of Buddhist ordination; and
(3) someone who has destroyed mental afflictions.
Benefactor with cylindrical reliquary, 2nd – 3rd century, Gandhara District, Swat Museum, schist.
Love scene and Vihara (Buddhist temple), 1st – 2nd century, Butrag, Swat District, Swat Museum, grey schist.
Amorino (mythical figure) teasing a lion, 2nd – 3rd century, Ramdas Collection (een verzameling sculptures left by Shri Ramdas, an antique dealer of Rawalpindi who migrated to India in 1947), Rawalpindi, National Museum of Pakistan, Karachi grey schist. #notalion.
De tekst is waarschijnlijk niet leesbaar. Daarom: The relief shows a male lion crouching on the ground with his head raised; an amorino is riding the lion mischievously. The French scholar Alfred Foucher described this image as ‘a statue of Eros on a lion in heat’. In Hesiod’s Theogoney, Eros os the primordial god born after Chaos, Gaia, and Tartarus, who inspired the fertility of the gods.
Wikipedia:
The Theogony i.e. “the genealogy or birth of the gods” is a poem by Hesiod (8th–7th century BC) describing the origins and genealogies of the Greek gods, composed c. 730–700 BC. It is written in the Epic dialect of Ancient Greek and contains 1022 lines. It is one of the most important sources for the understanding of early Greek cosmology.
Alfred Charles Auguste Foucher (1865–1952), was a French scholar, who argued that the Buddha image has Greek origins. He has been called the “father of Gandhara studies”,