an-indian-stone-stupa-base
Lot 143
An Indian Stone Stupa Base
Lot Details & Additional Photographs
Probably Pala period, 11th to 12th century CE, cylindrical in form with tiered sections, having four foliate arch niches each with a Buddha seated on a lotus base with their hands in various mudras, a rounded smooth upper dome with rough square area at top where another element to the stupa was removed or lost.
comes together with lacquered stand and tomobako wooden storage box.

6 7/8 x 4 1/4 x 4 1/4 in.

Private Collection, New York and North Carolina

By descent from Ethel Novello, New York, New York
Gift from Mr. Harold Rogers of Tokyo, Japan to consignor's family residing in United States during 1950s.

Ethel Novello was an art collector and fashion designer in New York City. She specialized in swimsuit design, clothing contestants for the Miss World Pageant, and her designs were featured in various publications throughout her career. Ethel's brother-in-law was a professor in Japan, and through this connection she acquired much of the Asian artwork offered here at auction.

Ethel's family had a long-time presence within the New York entertainment industry. Her mother, Ethel Novello McAssey, was a Broadway dancer. Her uncle was the famous Armando "Toto" Novello, also known as "Toto the Clown." Based in the Bronx, he was a traveling performer and silent film star throughout the early twentieth century.

Stupas were included at temple sites in various sizes, they typically consisted of a cylindrical base, a structure called a drum, a hemispherical dome, and a finial. These stupas sometimes contained important relics, but also were representations of the axis of the world which worshippers would walk clockwise around, the rotation representing the Buddha’s life cycle.

Old loss to top finial portion; old losses to surface and edges.

$800 - 1,200