Male figure beneath a caitya arch. Cornice fragment.
Accession Nr.: | 6328 |
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Type: | relief; architecture |
Date of production: |
2nd-3rd c.
Gandhara art |
Place of production: | |
Acquisition: | donation of Imre Schwaiger |
The frieze fragment shows the figure of a male figure, facing left, standing beneath a caitya arch. The frieze is intricately decorated and survives largely intact. The man puts his hands together in front of his chest in a greeting hand gesture (anjalimudra). He is dressed in a lower garment (paridhāna) and an upper garment (uttarīya). The chaitya arch ends in two spiral lines (volutes) on both sides, from which a bunch of grapes hangs on both sides, although the one on the left is broken. The left side of the frieze is closed by an Indo-Persian column, the capital of which is decorated with the figure of a lying zebu.
Its material is Himalayan gray slate.
Its material is Himalayan gray slate.