Possibly in the Peabody Essex Museum, MA, or another U.S. museum.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Possibly in a U.S. museum such as University of Michigan Museum of Art, the Milwaukee Public Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the Smithsonian, the Lowe Museum of Art in Coral Gables, FL, or the Peabody Essex Museum.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Possibly in a U.S. museum such as University of Michigan Museum of Art, the Milwaukee Public Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the Smithsonian, the Lowe Museum of Art in Coral Gables, FL, or the Peabody Essex Museum.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Possibly in a U.S. museum such as University of Michigan Museum of Art, the Milwaukee Public Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the Smithsonian, the Lowe Museum of Art in Coral Gables, FL, or the Peabody Essex Museum.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronze, casting (process)Note: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India." U. of Miami, 2004.
Possibly in a U.S. museum such as University of Michigan Museum of Art, the Milwaukee Public Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the Smithsonian, the Lowe Museum of Art in Coral Gables, FL, or the Peabody Essex Museum.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Possibly in a U.S. museum such as University of Michigan Museum of Art, the Milwaukee Public Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the Smithsonian, the Lowe Museum of Art in Coral Gables, FL, or the Peabody Essex Museum.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Possibly in a U.S. museum such as University of Michigan Museum of Art, the Milwaukee Public Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the Smithsonian, the Lowe Museum of Art in Coral Gables, FL, or the Peabody Essex Museum.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Possibly in a U.S. museum such as University of Michigan Museum of Art, the Milwaukee Public Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the Smithsonian, the Lowe Museum of Art in Coral Gables, FL, or the Peabody Essex Museum.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Possibly in a U.S. museum such as University of Michigan Museum of Art, the Milwaukee Public Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the Smithsonian, the Lowe Museum of Art in Coral Gables, FL, or the Peabody Essex Museum.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Possibly in a U.S. museum such as University of Michigan Museum of Art, the Milwaukee Public Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the Smithsonian, the Lowe Museum of Art in Coral Gables, FL, or the Peabody Essex Museum.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Possibly in a U.S. museum such as University of Michigan Museum of Art, the Milwaukee Public Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the Smithsonian, the Lowe Museum of Art in Coral Gables, FL, or the Peabody Essex Museum.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: copper, casting (process)Note: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India." U. of Miami, 2004.
Four-armed Ganesha is seated in teh lalitasana on a rectangular base, holding a broken tusk and a modaka (sweet cake).Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronze, casting (process)Note: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India." U. of Miami, 2004.
Four-armed Ganesha is seated in teh lalitasana on a rectangular base, holding a broken tusk and a modaka (sweet cake).Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronze, casting (process)Note: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India." U. of Miami, 2004.
Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: brassNote: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India." U. of Miami, 2004.
Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronze, casting (process)Note: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India." U. of Miami, 2004.
Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: copper, casting (process)Note: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India." U. of Miami, 2004.
Possibly in a U.S. museum such as University of Michigan Museum of Art, the Milwaukee Public Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the Smithsonian, the Lowe Museum of Art in Coral Gables, FL, or the Peabody Essex Museum. ; Note - General: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronze, casting (process)Note: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Possibly in the Peabody Essex Museum, MA, or another U.S. museum.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Possibly in the Peabody Essex Museum, MA, or another U.S. museum.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Possibly in a U.S. museum such as University of Michigan Museum of Art, the Milwaukee Public Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the Smithsonian, the Lowe Museum of Art in Coral Gables, FL, or the Peabody Essex Museum.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: "Ritual bronzes of Maharashtra and Karnataka" by Leo S. Figiel, 2007.
Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: brassNote: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India." U. of Miami, 2004.
Shiva, seated in yogi position, at the rear of a yoni-shaped base in a garland of skulls and armbands in the form of cobras; seated and standing devotees surround him.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronze, casting (process)Note: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Folk and Tribal Art of India"
Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India," U. of Miami, 2004.
Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India," U. of Miami, 2004.
A rare form of mukha-linga (cover for the linga) depicts a stupa-like linga surrounded by worshippers.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India," U. of Miami, 2004.
A bronze (pancha loha) sculpture of a seated figure of the Hindu god Siva. He has four arms and carries a parasu (axe) in his proper right rear hand, a mrga (deer) in his proper left rear hand, a naga (cobra) in his proper left fore hand and he holds his proper right hand in abhaya mudra (the gesture of protection). One leg is raised upon the throne in lalitasana (position of royal ease). At either end of the throne are the vertical bars for supporting a now lost framing arch.Culture: HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronze
A bronze (pancha loha) sculpture of a seated figure of the Hindu god Siva. He has four arms and carries a parasu (axe) in his proper right rear hand, a mrga (deer) in his proper left rear hand, a naga (cobra) in his proper left fore hand and he holds his proper right hand in abhaya mudra (the gesture of protection). One leg is raised upon the throne in lalitasana (position of royal ease). At either end of the throne are the vertical bars for supporting a now lost framing arch.Culture: HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronze
A bronze (pancha loha) sculpture of a seated figure of the Hindu god Siva. He has four arms and carries a parasu (axe) in his proper right rear hand, a mrga (deer) in his proper left rear hand, a naga (cobra) in his proper left fore hand and he holds his proper right hand in abhaya mudra (the gesture of protection). One leg is raised upon the throne in lalitasana (position of royal ease). At either end of the throne are the vertical bars for supporting a now lost framing arch.Culture: HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronze
Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronzeNote: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India." U. of Miami, 2004.
Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronze, casting (process)Note: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India." U. of Miami, 2004.
Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronze, casting (process)Note: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India." U. of Miami, 2004.
Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: brassNote: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India." U. of Miami, 2004.
Double-sided figurine showing, on one side, Vishnu holding gada (club) and chakra (wheel) in a crown and a garland of flowers, and on the other side, Krishna as the flute-playing Venugopala, who charmed gopi.Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: bronze, silver, casting (process)Note: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India." U. of Miami, 2004.