Bronze Sculptures - Ashtabhujadharini Devi Mariamman
by Kapil Goel DirectorExotic India Art is a One-stop Ecommerce brand dealing with Indian handmade products based on Indian Culture, Tradition, Region and Religion since 1998. You will get marvellous collection of Indian handmade and handpicked products based on Indian Arts, Paintings, Books, Sculptures, Jewelry, Textiles, Beads, Video, Audio, Beauty, Healthcare, Ayurveda and more. You will get products doorstep delivery facilities without adding any extra charges on products.
Here in Exotic India Art Sculptures collections, you will
get finest carved handpicked Indian handmade products. You will Sculptures and
Statues based on Indian Hindu God and Goddess,
Buddhist, Nepalese God and Goddess,
Rituals, Tantras, Dolls, Corporate Gift, Tribal Sculptures, South Indian
Sculptures and much more. You will also get Sculptures and Statues made of different
sizes and variety of materials like Gold, Silver, Copper, Brass, Marble, Stone,
Bronze Sculptures, Wood and many more.
Ashtabhujadharini Devi Mariamman |
Hoysala is the term used for the architecture and the
iconography that developed in present-day Karnataka under the patronage of the
Hoysala dynasty rulers. Having flourished in the twelfth and thirteenth
centuries, its structures stand as testimony to a Karnata Dravida aesthetic.
The murti that you see on this page depicts the Devi Mariamman, who is the equivalent of Devi Parvati or Devi Shitala of the
North. From Her iconography to every other detail of the sculpture, she looks
like She has been handpicked from the garbhagriha (inner precinct) of an
ancient Hoysala temple.
Devi Mariamman is seated in lalitasana on a giant lotus
throne. She is possessed of eight arms and, as such, is the Ashtabhujadharini.
She is clad in nothing but a dhoti below the navel, the silken fabric of which
gathers in lifelike folds over Her legs. A world of gold adornments on Her
upper body and divine weapons, including a kapala (skullcup) in each of Her
hands, a twin symbol of the feminine aesthetic and omnipotence. On Her brow sits
a tall crown that tapers towards the top. It is flanked by the ferocious hood
of the panchanaga, the texture of its underbelly having been executed with
superb detail.
The composition is placed on a wide-set quadrilateral
pedestal that features a row of latticeworked lotus petals followed by a row of
lotus petal engravings. The legs of the pedestal are short and shaped like the
lion’s paw. A strikingly symmetrical aureole, with minimal engravings,
completes the composition.
Sponsor Ads
Created on Apr 24th 2021 08:37. Viewed 189 times.