Pair of Oversize Earrings for a Buddhist Image

* Nearly 20,000 images of artworks the museum believes to be in the public domain are available to download on this site. Other images may be protected by copyright and other intellectual property rights. By using any of these images you agree to LACMA's Terms of Use.

Pair of Oversize Earrings for a Buddhist Image

Central Tibet (by a Newar artist), 16th-17th century
Jewelry and Adornments; earrings
Gilt copper repoussé inlaid with turquoise and clear stones with multicolored foil backing
a): 11 x 7 x 2 3/4 in. (27.94 x 17.78 x 6.99 cm); b): 11 1/8 x 7 1/8 x 2 3/4 in. (28.26 x 18.1 x 6.99 cm)
Gift of Helene and Dr. Joseph Pollock (M.89.112.2a-b)
Not currently on public view

Curator Notes

...
This pair of oversize earrings for a Buddhist image were made by a Newar artist working in Central Tibet. Newar artists, members of the chief historical and cultural ethnicity in Nepal, were renowned for their exceptional metalworking, especially repoussé, filigree, and gemstone inlay (see M.85.279.6 and M.2011.157.3a-c). The round top end of the earrings is in the form of a lotus with concentric bands of inlaid gemstones and gilt copper repoussé lotus petals radiating outward from the central clear gemstone with red foil-backing. Beneath this lotiform roundel, and surrounding it as a border, are scrolling vegetal designs in repoussé. Further down the central axis are a small triangular grouping of inlaid gemstones and a larger diamond-shaped inset arrangement. The earrings would have been worn suspended from the distended earlobes of large images of the Buddha Shakyamuni and other Buddhist deities. The distended earlobes originally represented the Buddha’s renunciation of the princely world but later became an artistic and iconographic convention for South Asian and Himalayan Buddhist divinities. Comparable oversize image earrings are illustrated in Jane Casey Singer, Gold Jewelry from Tibet and Nepal (New York: Thames and Hudson, 1996), pp. 14-15, figs. 5-7; and John Clarke, Jewellery of Tibet and Himalayas (London: V&A Publications, 2004), p. 56, fig. 38.
More...