BEIJING, March 28 (Xinhuanet) -- A newly
discovered wooden sculpture of a Buddha that had religious objects sealed in its
torso for 800 years sold for 14.3 million U.S. dollars, setting a world record
for any Japanese work of art, Christie's auction house said.
The seated figure of Dainichi Nyorai, or the supreme
Buddha, is attributed to Unkei, considered one of the two best sculptors of the
early Kamakura period in the 1190s, when the most highly regarded Buddhist art
was produced.
It was purchased at auction Tuesday by Mitsukoshi
Ltd., one of Japan's major department stores. Its presale estimate was 1.5
million dollars to 2 million dollars.
"Part of the reason that it went through the roof is
that it's a very, very rare piece and it's quite unusual for something of this
significance to all of a sudden resurface," said Adriana Proser, curator of
traditional Asian art at the Asia Society.
The Buddha, made of Cyprus wood, sits in a lotus
position wearing princely attire, a crown and jewelry, and hair in a topknot. It
is believed to have come from a temple during the Meiji period (1868-1911) when
Shinto was adopted as the state religion of Japan, Christie's said.
It was last known to be in the possession of a
prominent Japanese family but its whereabouts afterward became unknown until it
was sold to a dealer of Buddhist art in recent years.
The owner, believing the Buddha to be hollow, took
the sculpture to the Tokyo National Museum, where it was X-rayed. Three
dedicatory objects, representing Buddhist symbols and tied together with bronze
wire, were revealed: a wood pagoda, a crystal pagoda and a crystal ball on a
bronze stand.
Christie’s said it did not know if there were any
plans to remove the objects, which have been sealed inside for 800 years and
might provide historical information about the sculpture including inscriptions
of the temple or donor, the sculptor's identity and the date of dedication.
(Agencies)