The Hindu deity Shiva as divine teacher
Place of OriginTamil Nadu state, India
Date1100-1200
MaterialsGranite
DimensionsH. 41 1/2 in x W. 19 1/2 in x D. 16 1/2 in, H. 105.4 cm x W. 49.5 cm x D. 41.9 cm
Credit LineThe Avery Brundage Collection
Object numberB63S50+
DepartmentSouth Asian Art
ClassificationsSculpture
On View
On viewLocationGallery 4
More InformationShiva is recognizable by the vertical third eye in his forehead and the small snake, skull, and crescent moon in his elaborate hair locks. Not all depictions of Shiva have all of these characteristics.
Here Shiva sits teaching an unseen group of sages, with one of his feet resting on a dwarf representing ignorance. In this form Shiva “is an image of grace which imparts the supreme knowledge that leads to freedom from the bondage of this world.”*
The Sanskrit term by which this form of Shiva is known has as a secondary meaning, “south-facing,” and, in the region from which this sculpture comes, such sculptures were often placed in a niche in the south walls of temples.
*Quotation from a 1982 article on this form of Shiva by Pratyapaditya Pal.
Subject
- Hinduism
- deity
- Shiva
- teacher
approx. 1050-1150
approx. 1125-1175
approx. 1400-1500
approx. 1400-1500
approx. 1200-1400
approx. 900-1100
approx. 1400-1500
approx. 1000-1100
approx. 1000-1100