A PAINTING OF SITATAPATRA
A PAINTING OF SITATAPATRA

TIBET, 18TH CENTURY

Details
A PAINTING OF SITATAPATRA
TIBET, 18TH CENTURY
The white-skinned deity seated on a lotus base and wearing flowing red and green brocade robes, adorned with multiple golden jewelry and tiaras atop her three faces, holding various implements in her radiating eight hands and backed by a pale nimbus, surrounded by her attendant deities, all in a verdant green landscape
31 x 21 ¾ in. (78.7 x 55.2 cm.)
Literature
Himalayan Art Resource (himalayanart.org), item. no. 23393

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Lot Essay

Known as the “White Parasol Goddess,” this depiction of Sitatapatra comes from a twenty-nine deity mandala configuration. Her main face is white, flanked by a red face and blue face, each of which has three eyes. She holds a parasol, wheel, hook and arrow in her right hands, and in her left, a victory banner, vajra, lasso and bow. The thirty-one deities that surround her are from the mandala configuration, with Tsongkhapa at top center, and the female protector deity Shri Devi Magzor Gyalmo at bottom center. For an exquisite figure of Shri Devi Magzor Gyalmo, also known as Palden Lhamo, see lot 4022.

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