Tang Dynasty (618 – 907)
well modelled and painted in vivid colors, with eyes fixed in a fierce gaze, the face covered with flesh-colored pigment, the moustache and beard and eyebrows freely painted in black, the lips painted bright red, the cloth headdress painted in dark blue with a narrow border in gilding, the back of the head abraded, revealing the rough reddish-brown clay mixed with hemp and straw.
Height 8 1⁄2 inches (21.6 cm)
Provenance
Sotheby Parke Bernet, New York, Fine Chinese Ceramics, Works of Art and Paintings, 8 May 1981, lot 54A
A Tang dynasty painted stucco figure of a guardian with fierce expression, standing in a defiant attitude, wearing a very similar knotted cloth headdress, in the southern hall of the Gu Qinglian Temple in Jincheng, Shanxi province, is illustrated in Zhongguo siguan diaosu quanji (Compendium of Chinese Temple Sculptures), Vol. I, Early Temple Figures, Harbin, 2003, p. 257, no. 262, described as a Heavenly King (Tianwang), guardian of Buddhist Doctrine.
唐 彩塑天王頭像 高 21.6 厘米
Tang Dynasty (618 – 907)
Height 8 1⁄2 inches (21.6 cm)