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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Repaired break at proper right ankle, with small loss to back of ankle (piece survives as a separate fragment). Stress cracks throughout the reverse of the figure. Areas of flaking polychrome throughout. Crack to middle, proper left arm. Nicks, scratches and abrasions throughout.
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拍品 520拍卖编号 23226
TIBET, 18TH CENTURYA POLYCHROMED CLAY FIGURE OF HAYAGRIVA AND NAIRATMYA估价: USD 6,000 - 8,000