Head of a Bodhisattva
Artist/maker unknown, Pakistani or Afghani
Geography:
Probably made in Pakistan, South Asia, Asia
or made in Afghanistan, Asia
Date:
Mid- 2nd to early 3rd centuryMedium:
PhylliteDimensions:
13 3/4 x 9 5/8 x 10 1/2 inches (34.9 x 24.4 x 26.7 cm)Curatorial Department:
South Asian ArtObject Location:
1921-38-5Credit Line:
Purchased with the Annual Membership Fund, 1921
Probably made in Pakistan, South Asia, Asia
or made in Afghanistan, Asia
Date:
Mid- 2nd to early 3rd centuryMedium:
PhylliteDimensions:
13 3/4 x 9 5/8 x 10 1/2 inches (34.9 x 24.4 x 26.7 cm)Curatorial Department:
South Asian ArtObject Location:
Currently not on view
Accession Number:1921-38-5Credit Line:
Purchased with the Annual Membership Fund, 1921
Label:
Well before 326 B.C., when Alexander the Great's Greek army conquered areas north and west of India (parts of Pakistan and Afghanistan), cultural and commercial ties had been established between the Gandhara region of Pakistan-Afghanistan and the ancient Mediterranean world. Communication between these areas flourished throughout the following millennium. This Buddhist sculpture of the Gandhara region shows Greco-Roman influence in a number of characteristics, including the facial features, heavy naturalistic drapery, and ornaments. The hair of the image finds its prototype in a Greco-Roman image of the god Apollo, the so-called Apollo Belvedere-type. This head probably belonged to an over-life-sized standing or seated figure of a Bodhisattva (one who has reached perfection but postpones his own liberation to help others).
Well before 326 B.C., when Alexander the Great's Greek army conquered areas north and west of India (parts of Pakistan and Afghanistan), cultural and commercial ties had been established between the Gandhara region of Pakistan-Afghanistan and the ancient Mediterranean world. Communication between these areas flourished throughout the following millennium. This Buddhist sculpture of the Gandhara region shows Greco-Roman influence in a number of characteristics, including the facial features, heavy naturalistic drapery, and ornaments. The hair of the image finds its prototype in a Greco-Roman image of the god Apollo, the so-called Apollo Belvedere-type. This head probably belonged to an over-life-sized standing or seated figure of a Bodhisattva (one who has reached perfection but postpones his own liberation to help others).