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Source Description
Ganesha, lord of obstacles, can both create and remove challenges to success, and he is worshiped for his divine favor. In Nepal, where this sculpture was made, both Hindus and Buddhists worship Ganesha. He is associated with abundance and wealth, as his well-fed body suggests. His favorite sweets, held in a bowl in his lower left hand, are always in plentiful supply, and the radish held in his lower right hand carries associations with fertility and abundance. Here, Ganesha also holds a snake in his upper left hand; his upper right hand may once have held prayer beads. A second serpent encircles his waist, echoing the shape of the trunk that reaches into the bowl of sweets; it looks up at the elephant-headed god in reverence, adding to the sculpture’s dynamism as we imagine its slithering motion around the dancing deity.This sculpture may have been made for a Hindu or Buddhist devotee; both traditions worship Ganesha.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
5443
label
Dancing Ganesha
core
obj
dtoType
object
citationUrl
pageCount
8
Source metadata
id
5443
sourceUrl
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
Dancing Ganesha
description
Ganesha, lord of obstacles, can both create and remove challenges to success, and he is worshiped for his divine favor. In Nepal, where this sculpture was made, both Hindus and Buddhists worship Ganesha. He is associated with abundance and wealth, as his well-fed body suggests. His favorite sweets, held in a bowl in his lower left hand, are always in plentiful supply, and the radish held in his lower right hand carries associations with fertility and abundance. Here, Ganesha also holds a snake in his upper left hand; his upper right hand may once have held prayer beads. A second serpent encircles his waist, echoing the shape of the trunk that reaches into the bowl of sweets; it looks up at the elephant-headed god in reverence, adding to the sculpture’s dynamism as we imagine its slithering motion around the dancing deity.This sculpture may have been made for a Hindu or Buddhist devotee; both traditions worship Ganesha.
provenance
John and Berthe Ford, Baltimore; given to Walters Art Museum, 2002.
date
15th-16th century
citationUrl
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Metal
sculpture (visual works)
imageCount
8
pageCount
8
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
15.4
height
11
depth
5.5
dimensionsRaw
H: 6 1/16 × W: 4 5/16 × D: 2 3/16 in. (15.4 × 11 × 5.5 cm)
Source extras
med
gilded copper alloy
creator_ids
15526
collection_ids
INT
exhibition_ids
none
Page inventory
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1
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photo
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photo
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photo
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type
photo
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seq
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type
photo
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photo
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photo
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8
type
photo
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no
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no