
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Buddhist long-handled censer
China
- Date
- 8th century
- Medium
- Bronze
- Department
- Asian Art
- Institution
- Minneapolis Institute of Art
Hand censers of this unique form were used in Buddhist rituals during the Tang dynasty. The cup-shaped censer is fitted with a removable liner cast with a small Buddhist lion on the rim holding a loose ring in its mouth. The top of the handle is decorated with a flat, openwork petal-shaped ornament applied with two large bosses, and the handle terminus is surmounted by another protective Buddhist lion seated on a lotus-petal decorated base. While this type of ritual censer is often seen in the hands of Buddhist priests and bodhisattvas in Tang dynasty sculpture and painting, surviving bronze examples are rare. This is one of the finest known in terms of its casting and a similar work was discovered in 1984 in the tomb of the monk Shen Hui (d. 765), the seventh patriarch of Chan Buddhism, at Longmen near Luoyang in Henan province. China, Asia
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