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Vajrayana, or esoteric Buddhism, uses gender and sexual union to communicate the merging of compassion (male) and wisdom (female) that results in awakening. Here, the wrathful male Buddha Hevajra and his female partner Nairatmya stand in ecstatic embrace. With hair painted the fiery orange of wrathful deities, Hevajra’s eight heads look in all directions. His sixteen hands hold skull cups containing animals (in his eight right hands) and deities representing worldly elements (in his eight left hands): earth, water, air, fire, the moon, the sun, and the gods of death and wealth. He raises two of his four legs in a position of dance, while lunging sideways with the other two. Hevajra wears a garland of fift severed heads, while Nairatmya wears one of skulls.
Page data
- Page
- 6
- Source index
- 0
- Type
- photo
- Media ID
- 71fb3c5987abacee
- Size
- unknown
Document data
- ID
- 98099
- Core
- obj
- Type
- object
DTO data
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"provenance": "Purchased by Walter Hauser [1], Charlottesville, Virginia, 1964-65; given to Walters Art Museum, 2016.[1] Purchased from an unknown dealer or bazaar shop in Kalimpong or Darjeeling in West Bengal",
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Document identity
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Document source metadata
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"provenance": "Purchased by Walter Hauser [1], Charlottesville, Virginia, 1964-65; given to Walters Art Museum, 2016.[1] Purchased from an unknown dealer or bazaar shop in Kalimpong or Darjeeling in West Bengal",
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Document source extras
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Page context
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