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Indian and Himalayan Art

Mahasamvara Embracing His Consort

Made in Nepal, Asia

Malla Dynasty (1200-1769), 1467

Artist/maker unknown, Nepalese

Colors on cloth
Image: 42 x 28 inches (106.7 x 71.1 cm) Frame: 47 1/2 x 32 inches (120.7 x 81.3 cm)

Currently not on view

1994-148-610

Stella Kramrisch Collection, 1994

Label

During the Malla period, devotees began to worship new forms of both Buddhist and Hindu deities through paintings, sculptures, and devotional songs called charya gita. This vibrant painting presents Mahasamvara, a new form of the popular Buddhist deity Chakrasamvara. Mahasamvara is an istadevata (instructor deity) believed to mentor devotees like those depicted in the bottom of the painting. In the lower left a ritual practitioner and his wife perform a fire ceremony witnessed by another married couple behind them. Other white-clad monks, one of whom reads a ritual text, sit in the lower right. According to Newar Buddhist beliefs, these ritual activities call forth this particular pantheon of deities.

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