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The Supreme Attributes of Enlightenment

The Supreme Attributes of Enlightenment






Specifications
Item Code: RS24

Kaima Wood Sculpture
Artist: Vishwakarma Family of Varanasi

8.5 inches X 4.5 inches X 4.5 inches
800 Grams
Price: $155.00   Shipping Free - 4 to 6 days
SOLD
Viewed times since 2nd Jan, 2012
Description
This exquisitely modeled artwork depicts a magnificent Buddha head. He has half-closed eyes, sharp nose, elongated earlobes and short curly hair with prominent protuberance.

The treatment of the hair is according to the Buddhist tradition. Gautama, after his departure from the palace, drew forth his sword and cut off his long hair. The early Buddhist text Mahavastu mentions that the hair of the Siddhartha was cut off by the gods and carried to the Trayatrimsa heaven, where it was worshipped as a sacred relic. It is also said that they also carried away his turban. The short locks, following the tradition, are curled from left to right in the shape of snail-shell. In China and Japan they sometimes take the form of round beads or sharp spikes.

The representation of the Buddha must always have either the chignon or the protuberance on the skull which is presumably the seat of the manas or living mind (soul) of the Buddha.

This protuberance (ushnisha) is the first and most important of the thirty-two superior signs of a Buddha and probably last acquired. In the Indian Buddhist texts and its manifestations in art, the Buddha at his birth or in the different episodes of his life before his Enlightenment, is not represented with the protuberance of the skull. It is not until he attained the Buddhahood under the Bodhi-tree that he is represented with the full-sized ushanisha. Some say that the ushnisha means 'turban', dressed hair. According to a Buddhist tradition followed by Indian artists, the hair of the Buddha should be in short curls falling from left to right and the protuberance should also be covered with the curls. The shape of the ushnisha varied somewhat in different countries. The ushnisha of the Nepalese Buddhas is sometimes surmounted by a ball (jewel) from which issues a flame. According to a tradition the Buddha caused to issue from his head a flood of glory composed of a hundred precious rays. In Tibet the ushnisha if often surmounted by a flaming pearl (Jewel or cintamani). It is also said that the protuberance of the skull is a sign of supernatural wisdom of a Buddha. Some scholars opine that the ushanisha was basically a coil of hair, which later took the form of a protuberance on the skull.

The artist has bestowed ample attention on the face too - its treatment is soft, simple and abstract, and this has given it a graceful mellowness. The lotus-petal shaped half-closed eyes and the disproportionate (the lower being the thicker) lips, imply a delicate smile. The facial expression is expressing an inner experience of purity, compassion (karuna) and wisdom (prajna) - the supreme attributes of Enlightenment.

The face is round and has slight pointed chin, and the whole composition is placed on a beautiful. two layered lotus.


Delivered by to all international destinations within 3 to 5 days, fully insured.

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