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Vaikuntha Vishnu |
Date:
last quarter of the 8th century
Culture:
India (Jammu & Kashmir, ancient kingdom of Kashmir)
Medium:
Stone
Dimensions:
H. 41 1/8 in. (104.5 cm)
Classification:
Sculpture
Credit Line:
Purchase, Florence and Herbert Irving Gift, 1991
This complex form of Vishnu, first referred to by the name Vaikuntha in the seventh-century Vishnudharmottarapurana, is four-faced (chaturmurti), with the heads of a lion (right) and a boar (left) flanking a human head. He is also identifiable in this form by the epithet Para-Vasudeva, “the highest god.” The lion and boar represent Vishnu’s Varaha and Narasimha avatars. Carved in low relief on the back of the halo is the fourth face, a demonic, grimacing representation with fangs and a vertical third eye on the forehead. The small attendant on Vishnu’s left is Chakrapurusha, the personification of his war discus, originally balanced on his right by Gadadevi, the female personification of his battle mace. The earth goddess Prithvi, stands between Vishnu’s legs. from the eighth through the tenth century, this four-faced Vishnu was the paramount cult icon in the kingdom of Kashmir.
Provenance
[ Rossi & Rossi Ltd. , London, until 1991, sold to MMA]
Copyright Image
https://images.metmuseum.org
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