Pancha-Mukha Shiva

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Lord Shiva is one of the major deities of the cosmic trinity; he is the destroyer as well as the preserver among the entire Hindu pantheon; greatly known as a yogi for his kindness, mercy and justice, as he is the only god who is worshipped in the aniconic form of a linga, symbolizing both Shiva and Shakti. This painting aptly depicts Shiva’s Panchamukha form, as painter has very gracefully painted all the five heads in five different identifiable colors; the four heads face the four different directions and the fifth one at the top faces the sky.

In the Puranas, this five faced god represents the fivefold aspect of creation, five bodies in human beings, five directions, five elements, five senses, five colors, five energies, five divisions of time and five human races. Framed in a heavenly background of a clear blue sky and chirping birds with beautiful lotuses about to bloom at the bottom; he sits in padmasana on a full bloom lotus placed on a unique pedestal on the yellow-green hued grass.

Ornamented in lustrous jewels; a divine parasol and a deep gold polka dotted dhoti, carrying his ferocious ornaments in all the ten hands that symbolize the five aspects of panchana (five faced) as: Ishana, the lord (upward looking face)- he is Brahma, the creator and mind power; Tatpurusha, the cosmic being (eastward face)- he is Vishnu the lord or preservation and bliss; Vamadeva, the conceiler (westward face)- he is the suppressor who conceals Tatpurusha behind a veil of delusion. He is the evening sun and represents egoism and power of action; Sadyajata, the revealer (northern face)- he is Sada Shiva, the eternal being who manifests spontaneously and a granter of grace and enjoyment; Rudra, the destroyer (southern face)- he is Aghori, the fearless one who is the father of war gods and represents fire and desire.

This item can be backordered
Time required to recreate this artwork
6 to 8 weeks
Advance to be paid now
$86.25 (20%)
Balance to be paid once product is ready
$345
Item Code: HL60
Artist: Kailash Raj
Specifications:
Water Color Painting on PaperArtist : Kailash Raj
Dimensions 8.0 inch X 11.0 inch
Handmade
Handmade
Free delivery
Free delivery
Fully insured
Fully insured
100% Made in India
100% Made in India
Fair trade
Fair trade
This miniature, a contemporary masterpiece rendered against a turquoise green background in the late 18th century Kangra art style, represents five-faced form of Lord Shiva usually known in the Shaivite tradition as Sadashiva. This representation almost exactly pursues the iconographic convention of Shiva’s Pancha-mukha form as it initially evolved in early sculptures which have four of his faces carved on all four sides believed to guard all four directions, and the fifth, above the other four skywards-facing. The representation is simply exotic for in miniature paintings the canvas does not have the stone's multi-dimensionality to portray four directions and to plant a fifth, above them. However, this miniature, reproducing a great masterpiece from Kangra in hill region of late eighteenth century, so manipulates the canvas that it imparts a strong sense of multi-dimensionality.

Corresponding to his five faces Shiva’s anatomy has been conceived with ten arms, all carrying his one attribute or other : the right side hands carrying four – trident, thunderbolt ‘mustaka’ or heavy-blow-beat rod, sword and axe, the fifth being held in protective posture – ‘abhaya’, and the left, snake, noose, bell, goad and ‘damaru’, the double-drum. All five heads have their independent hair but in addition also a large basket-type massive ‘jata-juta’ – matted coiffure, cradling on it the fifth head. Except a snake carried in one of his hands merely as an attribute he has neither his usual elephant hide, tiger skin, serpents crawling on his body, skull-garland or anything revealing his ferocious form. On the contrary, in everything : from the iconography of his form – his large fluid eyes, sharp features, hair-style and the style o ear-ornaments, to his modeling and moonlike translucent body-colour, he reveals a strange feminine look.

Instead of seated on his usual tiger-skin this sublime form of the Great Lord has been conceived as seated on a large double lotus installed on a beautifully inlaid hexagonal chowki in cross-legged posture wearing a delicately printed ‘antariya’ – lower wear, reflecting a sari’s look. The figure reveals great benignity and rare divinity. The chowki, enshrining his figure, besides embedded with precious stones, has a high back and an umbrella canopying over Lord Shiva’s form, though like the entire Creation it also falls short of his expanse. A large bolster in maroon-red affording pleasant contrast to his figure’s pearls-like translucent white and his yellow ‘antariya’ is, like the lotus-seat, an element not usually represented in Shaivite iconography. In exact miniature tradition all five faces are in profile. The absence of his mount bull is noticeable. The form of his third eye has been conceived like an ornamental mark on the forehead, not like a feature that awed by its strange grotesqueness.

In Shaivite thought, Shiva is one of the Gods-Trio but also the ever present Sadashiva. The Pancha-mukha cult has broadly two lines, though both accept that it is the manifest form of Sadashiva – the ever present Shiva. Under one tradition, it is in his ‘ling’ form that Shiva has his five faces and that it is the ‘ling’ which is his ultimate manifestation. The ‘ling’ is the ‘jyoti’ – the potential flame, which represents ‘pancha-bhutas’ – the five cosmic elements or constituents of the cosmos. Thus, it is out of him that the cosmos is born. The other tradition is not much different. It conceives Shiva as Ishan, or as ‘Panchavaktramatrinetram’, that is, Shiva combines in him Tatpurusha, Vamadeva, Aghora, Sadyojata and Ishan, representing respectively the wind, the water, the fire, creative function, and the space. Thus again Shiva's five heads manifest the five cosmic elements and functions.

This description by Prof. P.C. Jain and Dr. Daljeet. Prof. Jain specializes on the aesthetics of literature and is the author of numerous books on Indian art and culture. Dr. Daljeet is the curator of the Miniature Painting Gallery, National Museum, New Delhi. They have both collaborated together on a number of books.

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