Details
1412 in. (36.8 cm.) high
Provenance
Acquired in Sante Fe, New Mexico.
Christie's New York, 15 March 2016, lot 241.
Literature
Himalayan Art Resources, item no. 25159.
Sale Room Notice
Please note the starting bid for this lot is $3,000.
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Lot Essay

Hayagriva, or “the horse-headed one,” is a wrathful protector deity associated with Avalokiteshvara, the god of compassion. Images of Hayagriva date back to post-Gupta India, where he is depicted as a diminutive attendant figure resembling a Yaksha, positioned below and flanking Avalokiteshvara, or sometimes Tara (R. Linrothe, Ruthless Compassion: Wrathful Deities In Early Indo-Tibetan Esoteric Buddhist Art, Boston, 1999, pp. 100-107). His iconography symbolises unwavering determination in overcoming obstacles and challenges, making him a guardian protector in many cultural traditions.
In the present lot, Hayagriva is depicted with a red body, three faces, six arms and a pair of wings. His faces are surmounted by a skull crown and a horse head rising from his wavy, upright hair. Standing in alidhasana on prostrate bodies on a multi-chromed lotus base, he is grasping his consort NaIratmya in yabyum position. Originally holding a kapala and kartrika in his dominant hands, Hayagriva extends his remaining arms outward in tarjanimudra, a gesture of fierce protection. He is dressed in a tiger-skin garment and a skirt of severed-heads, while his blue-skinned consort wears a leopard-skin skirt.

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