Northern Qi Dynasty (550 - 577)
with finely carved small features set in a serene, contemplative expression, the eyes half-closed under elegantly curved elongated eyelids, the plain arched eyebrows joined at the bridge of the slender nose, the small mouth with slightly pursed lips showing traces of red pigment, the ears with long, slotted lobes, the hair carved in neat horizontal rows of stylized curls in the shape of blunt faceted knobs rising over the domed usnisa on top and continuing down onto the neck, with a plain section at the back of the head carved with a slot filled with corroded lead amalgam holding a two-pronged rusted iron armature to receive a separate halo now lacking, the fine-grained gray stone with well-finished surface showing through a worn layer of white pigment and with remains of buff earth from burial all over.
Height 9 1⁄2 inches (24.2 cm)
Compare the similarly carved Northern Qi gray limestone heads of Buddha illustrated in Buddhist Sculptures: New Discoveries from Qingzhou, Shandong Province, Hong Kong Museum of Art, 2001, pp. 218-219, nos. 44 and 45.
北齊 青石佛頭像 高 24.2 厘米