A BRONZE FIGURE OF SHIVA
A BRONZE FIGURE OF SHIVA
A BRONZE FIGURE OF SHIVA
A BRONZE FIGURE OF SHIVA
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PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE NEW YORK CITY COLLECTION
A BRONZE FIGURE OF SHIVA

SOUTH INDIA, TAMIL NADU, VIJAYANAGARA OR NAYAKA PERIOD, 16TH-17TH CENTURY

Details
A BRONZE FIGURE OF SHIVA
SOUTH INDIA, TAMIL NADU, VIJAYANAGARA OR NAYAKA PERIOD, 16TH-17TH CENTURY
19 ½ in. (49.5 cm.) high
Provenance
J.J. Klejman Gallery, New York, by July 1972.

Lot Essay

Seated in a regal posture, with poised dignity, the present bronze depicts Shiva in a frontal pose, his lower proper right hand in abhayamudra (conferring protection or reassurance) and the lower proper left in ahuyavaradamudra (inviting the conference of boons); in the other two he holds his weapon, the battle-axe, and his favorite companion, the antelope, the head of which is turned in to face his lord. He is dressed in a short and unadorned dhoti and is adorned with a sacred thread that is knotted at the center of the chest above a band strapped around the ribs, necklaces centered with a foliate medallion, and beaded armlets and anklets. His long dreadlocks of hair, jata, are braided into a high chignon atop his head.

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