Tantric Form of Lakshmi Worshipped by Sage Chyavana

$78.75
$105
(25% off)
Item Code: HB75
Specifications:
Miniature Painting On Paper
Dimensions 8.5" x 7.5"
Handmade
Handmade
Free delivery
Free delivery
Fully insured
Fully insured
100% Made in India
100% Made in India
Fair trade
Fair trade
Chyavana is celebrated in the canons of Indian mythology as one of the Seven Great Hermits (sapta-rishi). Here he is presented as a devotee to the goddess. The sage is seated in the midst of a forest with a rosary in his right hand and the left hand placed palm upwards on his right feet. His seat is the skin of an antelope, and he adorns a similar outfit over his two shoulders. The rishi is bearded, and in contrast to the usual portrayal of ascetics as unornamented, he wears elaborate jewelry of the kind kings are seen wearing. As will be observed later this is not without significance. His forehead is marked with the Vaishnavite tilaka and caste marks represented by horizontal lines can be seen all over his body.

The gaze of the holy one is firmly fixed in the front, a moment of contemplative concentration. It is as if the moment is one when the great goddess, impressed by her devotee's attentions, decides to manifest herself in front of him. This is but the ultimate goal of all ascetic activity. Interpreted on a symbolic level, the sage Chyavana signifies our own inner longing to envision the Devi. As a worshipper of the goddess and as one who receives her grace, he is a symbol of the patron or the viewer of the painting itself. He has achieved the same result which we would have desired to gain. Hence is he shown adorned in 'material' jewelry. We too can achieve 'darshan' of the goddess, while still following the 'ordinary' course of our lives and fulfilling our karma.

In extension of the same symbolism the sage is shown seated in a grove full of cheerful and colorful trees. In contrast to the rishi, the goddess is shown separately across an open space and is seated upon an elaborate corpse. Her complexion is fair and in her four hands she carries implements more commonly associated with Vishnu. These are a mace, conch, chakra , and lotus. Her yellow garments too are reminiscent of Vishnu. This points out that she is but a form of Goddess Lakshmi the consort of Vishnu. But rather than her usual seat of a lotus here she sits upon a corpse, connoting her Tantric affiliations.


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Other Paintings of this Series:

Siddha Lakshmi with Kali

Kali The Divine Mother

Bhadrakali, Destroyer of the Universe

Varahi

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