拍品 932
  • 932

西藏 十五/十六世紀 密勒日巴生平畫傳唐卡 |

估價
80,000 - 120,000 USD
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描述

  • Distemper on cloth
  • 94.5 x 66 cm

來源

Galerie Koller Zürich, Auktion 79/3, 24/25 Mai 1991, tafel 6, nr. 175.

拍品資料及來源

This rare and important thangka depicts the mystical life of Tibets’s most revered yogin Milarepa (1040-1123). The painting remains one of the earliest known thangkas where episodes of his life story are freely arranged in the landscape around him, together with deities and historical personages; compare a ca. 1500 Western Tibetan example in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art were individual scenes are compartmented around the central image of the yogin, see Pratapaditya Pal, Art of Tibet, Los Angeles, 1983, p. 149, cat. P. 14.

Although Milarepa is a progenitor of the Kagyu lineage, he is perceived by Tibetans of all orders as the archetypal yogin and is held in the highest esteem for his heroic quest for knowledge. In his youth he mastered the arts of black magic but became disillusioned by destructive practises and resolved to seek the dharma. His first Buddhist teacher was unable to impart effective instruction and referred him to a man called Marpa from Wheat Valley in Lhodrak.

His trials while apprenticed to Marpa (1012-1096) are legendary. Frustrated by his lack of progress and unable to understand why Marpa seemed to be withholding teachings Milarepa give up and left on several occasions. Finding no satisfaction elsewhere he always returned, and for his persistence he was finally granted the teachings he sought. Milarepa had suffered greatly during his training, yet once enlightened he achieved a sublime perception.