Miniature Shrine with Jain teachers
Place of OriginWestern India
Date1447-1448
CultureJain
MaterialsCopper alloy
DimensionsH. 6 in x W. 3 3/4 in
Credit LineThe Avery Brundage Collection
Object numberB64B11
DepartmentSouth Asian Art
ClassificationsSculpture
On View
Not on viewFrom the 14th to the 16th century, a large number of these bronze portable shrines were made for the flourishing Jain community in India. They depict the Jain Tirthankaras, enlightened beings similiar to the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas. These figures, either standing or sitting, are always shown in meditation. Unlike artists belonging to other Hindu sects, Jain artists play down the sensuous modeling of the body and they concentrate on symmetry and geometric formalism. Jain Tirthankaras are supposed to have shoulders resembling those of a bull, their torsos like that of a lion while their chests expand with inner vitality.
1850-1900
approx. 1800-1900
1000-1100
approx. 1700-1900
dated 1512 (V.S. 1569)
approx. 1125-1175
approx. 100-200
approx. 800-900