Jul 24, 2015
Jul 24, 2015
Jul 24, 2015

Kali on Shiva, from a Tantric Devi Series

Kali on Shiva, from a Tantric Devi Series

c. 1810

Gum tempera and gold on paper

Sheet: 20.3 x 26 cm (8 x 10 1/4 in.)

Gift of Nancy and Wayne Hunnicutt 2014.650

Location

Did you know?

This Tantric Devi painting is from a series made in the Pahari Kingdom of Mandi. CMA also has another from the same series, 2020.431.

Description

The goddess Kali kneels in the posture reserved for wrathful deities ready for battle. In one hand she holds the sword she used to sever the demon head she triumphantly grasps in another hand. As the personification of divine energy—shakti in Sanskrit—Kali appears active, while the male principle, personified as her consort Shiva, is like a corpse (shava).

The scene is set in a cremation ground, complete with vultures, jackals, and bones. Contemplation of paintings such as this assists followers in overcoming fear of death. In this image, the dead body is overlaid with the dual principles of the divine in Hindu thought: male and female, passive and active, matter and energy, white and black, Shiva and Shakti.

See also

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