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Source Description

Depicted with a serene gaze and a gentle smile, this figure may represent a Buddha or a Jina. Both Buddhas and Jinas are spiritually liberated, enlightened beings regarded as the supreme teachers and moral exemplars of their respective religious traditions. Buddhist and Jain communities thrived alongside one another in the region of Mathura (a city in north-central India) in the early first millennium, and visual representations of the beings revered by each share many features. For example, both Buddhas and Jinas have elongated earlobes, regarded as one of many auspicious physical characteristics of a great being. They are not adorned in jewelry, for both Buddhas and Jinas renounce wealth and luxury in their pursuit of spiritual freedom. When this figure was fully intact his identity would have been clearer, for the heads of Buddhas are crowned with an "ushnisha," an auspicious cranial protuberance that is absent from the Jinas of this early period.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
40753
label
Head of Buddha or Jina
core
obj
dtoType
sculpture
pageCount
14
Source metadata
id
40753
contentType
sculpture
stage
normalized
title
Head of Buddha or Jina
description
Depicted with a serene gaze and a gentle smile, this figure may represent a Buddha or a Jina. Both Buddhas and Jinas are spiritually liberated, enlightened beings regarded as the supreme teachers and moral exemplars of their respective religious traditions. Buddhist and Jain communities thrived alongside one another in the region of Mathura (a city in north-central India) in the early first millennium, and visual representations of the beings revered by each share many features. For example, both Buddhas and Jinas have elongated earlobes, regarded as one of many auspicious physical characteristics of a great being. They are not adorned in jewelry, for both Buddhas and Jinas renounce wealth and luxury in their pursuit of spiritual freedom. When this figure was fully intact his identity would have been clearer, for the heads of Buddhas are crowned with an "ushnisha," an auspicious cranial protuberance that is absent from the Jinas of this early period.
provenance
Sale, Sotheby's, New York, September 20 1985, lot 325; Private collection; given to Walters Art Museum, 1987.
date
ca. 2nd century CE (Kushan)
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Sculpture
sculpture (visual works)
imageCount
14
pageCount
14
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
27
height
23.3
depth
19
dimensionsRaw
H: 10 5/8 × W: 9 3/16 × D: 7 1/2 in. (27 × 23.3 × 19 cm)
Source extras
med
mottled pink sandstone
creator_ids
2191
collection_ids
INT
exhibition_ids
none
Page inventory
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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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no
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type
photo
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no
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no
seq
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type
photo
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no
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seq
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type
photo
mediaId
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no
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no