A STONE FIGURE OF VARAHI
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A STONE FIGURE OF VARAHI

SOUTH INDIA, PALLAVA PERIOD, 8TH CENTURY

細節
A STONE FIGURE OF VARAHI
SOUTH INDIA, PALLAVA PERIOD, 8th CENTURY
The boar-faced goddess seated in lalitasana with her right hand in abhayamudra and her left in varadamudra, wearing a long dhoti secured at the waist with a sash, wearing a foliate armband, sacred thread, necklaces, large earrings and a band across the breasts, the face finely modeled with a conical crown, the proper upper left hand holding a conch
29 1/8 in. (74 cm.) high
來源
Private Collection, Chennai, before 2007
Private Collection, Delhi
注意事項
Lots which are Art Treasures under the Art and Antiquities Act 1972 cannot be exported outside India. Please note that lots are marked as a convenience to you and we shall not be liable for any errors in, or failure to, mark any lot.

拍品專文

This figure of Varahi originally belonged to a set of seven goddesses, known as the Sapta Matrika or "Seven Mothers," comprising Brahmani, Maheshvari, Kaumari, Vaishnavi, Varahi, Indrani, and Chamunda. Each goddess is the divine female counterpart to a principal male god of the Vedic and Hindu pantheon; she is equally a singular and prominent deity who simultaneously embodies the benign and ferocious aspects of the divine mother. Varahi is the female counterpart to Vishnu's manifestation as the boar-headed god Varaha. Interestingly, Varahi is the only counterpart to an incarnation of a deity rather than the deity himself. Her inclusion may suggest that, like Skanda, Bhairava, and many local goddesses, she held a degree of independence in South India before being incorporated into Shaivism.

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