As a lover of Korean art and an avid collector, American Robert Mattielli often visited Mary’s Alley, known for its hole-in-the-wall antique shops, in Insa-dong, Seoul during his more than 30 years in Korea.



On one of his regular visits to the neighborhood in the early 1970s, he discovered and purchased a Buddhist painting with notable wear and tear for a mere $10.





“Obuldo,” a 18th-century Korean Buddhist painting (Courtesy of the Portland Art Museum)



Unknowingly, Mattielli -- director of the arts and crafts program for the US military in Korea at the time -- had become the owner of “Obuldo,” an 18th century Buddhist painting depicting five Buddhas that had been stolen from Songgwangsa, a major Buddhist temple in Suncheon, South Jeolla Province, in the 1970s.



After making its journey to the US with Mattielli and his wife Sandra in 1985, the piece returned home to Korea on Thursday afternoon, according to the Jogye Order of Korean Buddhism.



“(The painting was) crumpled up like a bedsheet, partially folded and flaking,” Robert Mattielli, 91, recalled in a recent interview with Artsy, a US based online art resource. “I thought we’d at least be able to save certain portions of it -- the faces or bodies of the Buddhas.”



In their desire to share the piece with the greater public, the Mattielli couple decided to donate “Obuldo,” which was created in 1725 as a part of the painting of 53 Buddhas, to the Portland Art Museum in Oregon in 2014, when the National Research Institute of Cultural Heritage officials, who were in the midst of conducting research on Korean collections in the US, heard of the news.





Buddhist monks bow before “Obuldo,” on exhibition at the Portland Art Museum in Portland, Oregon, on Dec. 2. (Courtesy of the Jogye Order of Korean Buddhism)



After being notified about the institute’s research, the couple decided to repatriate the painting to its home country following a three-month exhibition at the Portland Art Museum from September to December, according to the Cultural Heritage Administration.



“‘Obuldo’ might have disappeared forever if (Robert Mattielli) had not bought and framed the severely damaged work,” said the government agency.



This is not the first time a Korean Buddhist painting has been repatriated this year.





"Obuldo” arrives in a blue crate at the Central Buddhist Museum in Seoul from Portland, Oregon, Thursday. (Courtesy of the Jogye Order of Korean Buddhism)