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Kathmandu: Eight-Armed Amoghapasa Avalokitesvara

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Kathmandu: Eight-Armed Amoghapasa Avalokitesvara

NEPAL, Kathmandu

Amoghapasa is a form of Avalokitesvara very popular in Nepal. The name refers to the “unfailing noose.”
The figure, standing on a double lotus pedestal, once had eight arms, but all that remain is a complete right arm held in varada (wish-granting) mudra and a damaged one that may have held the noose. The Bodhisattva wears a crown fronted by a lotus flower. Numerous pieces of jewelry decorate the body, the most interesting being the beaded necklace that reaches to the thighs. The elongated body is in tribhanga posture and has an hourglass figure. A belt with sashes hanging from three different points has ornate hems while another sash loops across the thighs. Most of the paint has flaked off the statue but residual paint is still visible.

For more details, go to the Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture G-M, page 527.

Cite this article:

Hsingyun, et al. "Kathmandu: Eight-Armed Amoghapasa Avalokitesvara." Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture G-M, vol. 11, 2016, pp. 527.
Hsingyun, Youheng, Yann Lovelock, Yuan Chou, Susan Huntington, Gary Edson, and Robert Neather. 2016. "Kathmandu: Eight-Armed Amoghapasa Avalokitesvara" In Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture G-M, 11:527.
Hsingyun, Youheng, Lovelock, Y., Chou, Y., Huntington, S., Edson, G., & Neather, R.. (2016). Kathmandu: Eight-Armed Amoghapasa Avalokitesvara. In Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture G-M (Vol. 11, pp. 527).
@misc{Hsingyun2016,
author = Hsingyun and Youheng and Lovelock, Yann and Chou, Yuan and Huntington, Susan and Edson, Gary and Neather, Robert,
booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture G-M},
pages = 527,
title = {{Kathmandu: Eight-Armed Amoghapasa Avalokitesvara}},
volume = 11,
year = {2016}}


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