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Siamese sculpture in the Hermitage
Walking Buddha 15th century (?) Bronze, mother of pearl Height: 41 cm A very late restoration and the small chips scattered across the face of the Buddha give him a sterner, more distant expression that he would originally have had. This sculpture is the only one in the Hermitage collection that allows us to fully grasp the peculiarities of the "supernatural anatomy" of the Buddha that the craftsmen of Sukhothai sought to convey: a large upper body and narrow waist; a torso equally rounded on both sides; arms so long that the Buddha could touch his knees without bending; legs like the trunk of a banyan tree... The stylized bend of the right arm, hanging freely alongside the body and repeating its lines, also appeared first in Sukhothai.
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