Blog

$1.5M Buddha Statue Stolen From LA Gallery

Sensitive to Art & its Discontents

The family-owned Barakat Gallery in Los Angeles, specializing in international antiquities, discovered last week that a prized enormous Buddha sculpture from Japan had been stolen from its outdoor grounds in West Hollywood. The four-foot bronze artifact was taken during the early hours of Monday morning, September 18, after the thief, who remains at large, came equipped with a moving truck and dolly to facilitate the burglary. Large Stone Buddha Garden Statue

$1.5M Buddha Statue Stolen From LA Gallery

According to Gallery Director Paul Henderson, the Buddha statue hails from Japan and dates back to the Edo period (1603–1867). An inscription on the work, written partially in Sanskrit, attributes the artifact to an artist named Tadazou Iinuma and indicates that it was “prayed for and requested by Ryozen, master of the Shingon religious party, Dainichi-Nyorai, Yudo-no-San Temple, of the highest social class.”

“This monumental bronze sculpture likely once dominated the interior of a temple,” Henderson told Hyperallergic. “Judging from the inscription, it is likely that this work was once placed in the Yudo-no-San Temple.”

Gallery owner Fayez Barakat told local news outlet KTLA that he acquired the enormous sculpture over 55 years ago, and that “there is no other piece in the world quite like it.” He had situated the statue, whose estimated value he says is $1.5 million, in the outdoor grounds of the La Cienega Boulevard gallery location for public enjoyment alongside hundreds of other international artifacts. Hyperallergic has inquired further about the object’s provenance.

Security footage that captured the incident showed the thief pulling up to the scene in a Budget moving truck, breaking open the driveway gate, and wheeling the bronze cast on a dolly back to the truck.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department has not responded to Hyperallergic’s request for comment. According to the gallery, no arrests have been made so far.

Rhea Nayyar (she/her) is a New York-based teaching artist who is passionate about elevating minority perspectives within the academic and editorial spheres of the art world. Rhea received her BFA in Visual... More by Rhea Nayyar

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Tate Britain did wisely to rehang the British poet and painter closer to modernity.

A Cubist Commission in Brooklyn at The Met is a compact, simple display, but the work and research it contains is diminished by being so cut off from its historical and personal contexts.

The first prize winner will receive $25,000 and a commission to portray a remarkable living American for the Smithsonian museum’s collection.

Two movies at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival reflect on the onscreen representation of the Holocaust after Claude Lanzmann’s landmark Shoah.

The London institution launched a website to recover reportedly hundreds of missing items, some suspected stolen by a former employee.

The 213,000-square-foot complex in Richmond, Virginia, will be a hub for multidisciplinary research and collaboration and a resource for the community.

The town of Pomfret is restricting access to a popular photo spot after complaints of excessive traffic, trespassing, and noise.

“Most of the ice here in Norway will be gone in this century. You can say that we are melting back in time,” said archaeologist Lars Holger Pilø.

The moving image artist will discuss her investigative practice and the implications of digital image proliferation, taking place via livestream and in Philadelphia.

Those who ventured through torrential rain were treated to intimate conversations in cozy lofts and sometimes extraordinary work.

Locals expressed anger and sadness over the city’s decision to remove the Temple Bell less than a month after its creator architect Raymond Moriyama’s death.

$1.5M Buddha Statue Stolen From LA Gallery

carved stone bathtub Hyperallergic is a forum for serious, playful, and radical thinking about art in the world today. Founded in 2009, Hyperallergic is headquartered in Brooklyn, New York.