Votive stele, 596 CE, now in the collection of the Minneapolis Institute of Art.
From the stele's description on [artsmia.org](www.artsmia.org):
*'The formative phase of Chinese Buddhist sculpture is well represented in small, portable votive bronze images such as this. The linear drapery folds and flame motifs of the mandorla (body halo) indicated by little more than incised lines suggest that artists may have worked from drawings or sketches carried back by pilgrims from holy sites in India. This Chinese penchant for combining linear calligraphic surface decoration with sculptural form began to change however in the sixth century toward a more fully, three-dimensional, sculptural style accentuating mass, volume, and naturalism over stylized lineation.'*
More information [here](https://collections.artsmia.org/art/99734/votive-stele-china)