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Showing posts with label bronze sculpture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bronze sculpture. Show all posts

Thursday, August 22, 2019

Gorgeous Krishna Plays The Flute To His Cow


The sculpture you see on this page is loaded with a woodwind set on His lips, the sunset blue composition of His roopa, and the tribhang (extending out in three points along the structure) pose. It is a contemporary, high-expertise imitation of the sorts of life-sized carvings to be found on antiquated sanctuary dividers of the South. 


The handsome young cowherd as one of His cows for an audience. There is not a more iconic duo in Indian culture than Lord Krishna with His beloved bovine companion.It makes for an image that is superlatively holy in terms of iconography, the cow being the sacred maternal figure in the Indian psyche. The rich pastel hues of the colour-palette symbolise the fullness of their relationship, much sung about in devotional literature revolving around the youthful Deva


Monday, August 12, 2019

Beturbaned Radha-Krishna White Marble Statue


Radha-Krishna is the most celebrated amorous couple in Indian culture. Having devoted Her all to the most handsome youth of Vrindavan, Radha has the privilege of being an integral part of His iconography to this day. This despite the fact that She could never have Him as Her lord and husband during their time together in ihloka (human realm of existence).


 White Marble Statue



Elaborate turbans sit on both their heads, in keeping with the appeal of the rest of their attire. Sculpted from the best of homegrown marble, the medium captures the divine beauty of Krishna's togetherness with His Radha.

Thursday, July 18, 2019

The Ascetic Lord Ganesha in yogic roopa

This bronze sculpture is a unique study in Lord Ganesha iconography. It is the yogic roopa of the son of Hinduism's mahayogi, Lord Shiva. The giveaways are in the kamandalu that He carries in His left hand, a quintessential possession of the ascetic.All the bhiksha He receives is gathered in it, no matter the nature of the edible in question; because He consumes mitahar (measured proportions of food) for His bare survival, as opposed to consumption for pleasure.
Ascetic Lord Ganesha


Another sign of the Lord's asceticism lies in the kind of slippers that grace His feet. It is called kharam, which serve to merely clothe the sole and are secured in place by being wedged in between the hallux and the index toe. An open garland graces His torso.

Shakyamuni Buddha, Indication of his supreme wisdom

At the time of awakening, when the former prince of a warrior clan of northern India passed from the hungry acetic to the Buddha himself, h...