Atlas

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Atlas

Pakistan, Gandhara region, 2nd-3rd century
Sculpture
Gray schist
15 3/8 x 12 x 5 1/4 in. (39.05 x 30.48 x 13.33 cm)
The Phil Berg Collection (M.71.73.136)
Not currently on public view

Curator Notes

This winged Atlas and myriad analogous representations in stone and stucco originally served as atlantes figures encircling the bases of Buddhist stupas (funerary monuments) in ancient Gandhara (an im...
This winged Atlas and myriad analogous representations in stone and stucco originally served as atlantes figures encircling the bases of Buddhist stupas (funerary monuments) in ancient Gandhara (an important nexus of the Silk Routes and the transmission of Buddhism in present-day northwestern Pakistan and northeastern Afghanistan). Conceptually based on Classical Western atlantid architectural support figures, but portrayed as a winged version of the muscular Greek titan Atlas who supported the celestial spheres on his shoulders for eternity, Gandharan Atlas figures were fashioned seated with varying leg and arm positions. Here, Atlas sits with his left knee and leg upright and his now-missing right knee and leg probably originally lying flat on the ground. His left arm extends horizontally so that the overturned hand is adjacent to the knee. His now-lost right arm may have originally been extended straight or slightly crooked with the right hand resting on or beside the knee. Some renditions have one or two arms upraised in a supporting pose. Atlas figures can have exposed genitalia or be covered by lower garments or sashes. The mustachioed and bearded head is generally slightly cocked to one side, as here, or is sometimes staring straight ahead if the body is in a symmetrical frontal posture. Comparable Gandharan Atlas figures are in the British Museum, London (1880.178, .181, and .183), Cleveland Museum of Art (24.330 and 2011.136), Norton Simon Museum of Art, Pasadena (F.1975.17.17.S), and Victoria and Albert Museum, London (IM.123-1918 and IS.55-1948).
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Bibliography

  • Berg, Phil. Man Came This Way: Objects from the Phil Berg Collection. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1971.