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Head of the Buddha

Asian Art Museum

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Object Details

Provenance

Possibly as early as late 1940s-at least 1965
Nasli M. (1902-1971) and Alice N. Heeramaneck (1910-1993), New York, NY, method of acquisition unknown [1]
At least 1965-September 19, 1996
Jay C. Leff (1925-2000), purchased from Nasli M. and Alice N. Heeramaneck [2]
September 19, 1996
Sale, New York, NY, Sotheby’s, “Indian and Southeast Asian Art,” September 19, 1996, lot 137 [3]
September 19, 1996- March 19, 2014
Ownership information unknown
March 19, 2014
Sale, New York, NY, Christie’s, Sale 2828, “Indian and Southeast Asian Art,” March 19, 2014, lot 1069 [4]
2014
Francesca Galloway, London, England, purchased at March 19, 2014, Christie’s Sale, New York, NY on behalf of the Freer Gallery of Art [5]
From 2014
Freer Gallery of Art, purchase from Francesca Galloway [6]
Notes:
[1] In the 2014 Christie’s “Condition Report” for this object (lot 1069), it includes a “Notice” that describes the provenance as “previously in the collection of Nasli and Alice Heeramaneck, possibly as early as the late 1940s, and was then purchased by Jay C. Leff in the 1960s or earlier.” See Christie’s “Condition Report,” Lot 1069, dated March 15, 2014, copy in object file.
An individual stated that this object, “lot 1069[,] originally belonged to [the] Heeramanecks from whom Leff bought it at least in the [19]60s if not earlier. If I am not mistaken it was in a show that Nasli did in NY in the late [19]40s.” See email from an individual to Christie’s Indian and Southeast Asian Department, with the subject “Re: Invitation,” dated March 12, 2014, copy in object file. Further research is required to determine if it was indeed included in an exhibition by the Heeramaneck’s in the 1940s.
It can be determined that this object was in the collection of Jay C. Leff by October 1965 since it was included in the exhibition catalogue “Near Eastern and Far Eastern art from the collection of Jay C. Leff.” The exhibition was organized by the American Federation of Arts and it ran from October 1965 to October 1967. The American Federation of Arts is an organization in New York, NY that organizes and tours art exhibitions. Further research is required to identify the exhibition venues. See Haskins, John F., “Near Eastern and Far Eastern Art from the Collection of Jay C. Leff,” (New York: American Federation of Arts, distributed by October House, New York, 1965), pp. 22-23, no. 44, illustrated. Object is described as “Head of Buddha, Kushan.”
Nasli M. (1902-1971) and Alice N. Heeramaneck (1910-1993), New York, NY, were dealers and collectors of Pre-Columbian and Asian art based in New York, NY. Nasli Heeramaneck began his career as a dealer in Paris during the 1920s and relocated to New York, NY in 1927. In 1939, Nasli married Alice Arvine, an American portrait painter from New Haven, CT. Nasli founded Heeramaneck Galleries in New York, NY by 1929. He began to retire in 1964 and liquidated some of the gallery’s stock at auction at Parke-Barnet, New York in 1964 and 1965. Many objects from the Heeramaneck collection were either purchased or donated to American museums. Items from their collection may be found in The British Museum; the Cleveland Museum of Art; Los Angeles County Museum; The Metropolitan Museum of Art; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; National Museum of New Delhi; Virginia Museum of Fine Arts; and Yale University.
[2] See note 1.
Jay C. Leff of Uniontown, Pennsylvania, was the first president and chief executive officer of the bank that his family founded in 1947, and he held that position until his retirement in 1986. He also served as the chairman of the Pennsylvania State Council on the Arts. Leff began collecting chess sets and Asian decorative arts in the late 1940s and he was also an avid collector of the arts of many cultures, including arts from across Asia (Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Nepal, Tibet, China, and Japan), African, ancient Latin America, North America, Oceania, and ancient Egypt. According to his obituary in the Pittsburgh “Post-Gazette,” his collection contained more than 4,000 pieces at its peak. Leff acquired objects for his collection through American dealers and at auction. Pieces from his collection have been exhibited at the Brooklyn Museum, Carnegie Museum of Art, and the Frick Art Museum. He also exhibited objects in the lobby of the Fayette Bank and Trust Co. building in Uniontown. Items from his collection may be found in the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Yale University Art Museum. See Jay C. Leff’s Obituary, Pittsburgh “Post-Gazette,” January 25, 2000.
[3] See Sotheby’s “Indian and Southeast Asian Art” [auction catalogue] (New York: Sotheby’s, September 19, 1996), lot 137, ill. Described as “A Kushan Mottled Red Sandstone Head of Buddha” and the “Property from the Collection of Jay C. Leff.”
[4] Object is described as “A red sandstone head of Buddha.”
[5] See authorization/agreement letter from Julian Raby, Director, to Francesca Galloway, undated (signed by Galloway on March 18, 2014), copy in object file. See also invoice number 2574 from Francesca Galloway to Debra Diamond, dated March 20, 2014, copy in object file.
[6] See Freer Gallery of Art “Acquisition Consideration Purchase” form, approved on March 18, 2014, copy in object file.
Research updated April 7, 2023

Collection

Freer Gallery of Art Collection

Exhibition History

Encountering the Buddha: Art and Practice Across Asia (October 14, 2017 to February 6, 2022)

Previous custodian or owner

Nasli M. and Alice N. Heeramaneck
Jay C. Leff (1925-2000)
Francesca Galloway, Ltd. (established 1992)

Credit Line

Purchase — funds provided by Rajinder K. Keith and Narinder K. Keith

Date

2nd-3rd century

Period

Kushan period

Accession Number

F2014.3

Restrictions & Rights

Usage conditions apply

Type

Sculpture

Medium

Red sandstone

Dimensions

H x W x D: 33.8 × 26.9 × 25.5 cm (13 5/16 × 10 9/16 × 10 1/16 in)

Origin

Mathura, India

Related Online Resources

Google Arts & Culture

See more items in

National Museum of Asian Art

Data Source

National Museum of Asian Art

Topic

stone
Buddhism
Buddha
Kushan dynasty (1st century BCE - 299 CE)
India
figure
South Asian and Himalayan Art

Metadata Usage

Not determined

Link to Original Record

http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ye374c8d25e-4655-4812-ab4d-f6c76a02763e

Record ID

fsg_F2014.3

Discover More

seated Buddha

Buddhism in Asian Art

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