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Ten-Armed Avalokitesvara

Bronze

Ten-Armed Avalokitesvara

INDONESIA

This rare Ten-Armed Avalokitesvara wears a headdress fronted by a Buddha, behind which is an oval hollow nimbus rimmed with flames. The Bodhisattva wears ornate jewelry as well as a stole that runs across the chest. Two belts, one around the waist and other around the hips, are similar in style to the collar necklace and headband. The accessories date the statue to circa the 8th or 9th centuries. The two hands at the front are raised in a mudra while the remaining arms fan out holding various Dharma implements: a vase, prayer beads, sutra scroll, vajra, and a lotus bud. Other objects are missing from the empty hands. The lower garment worn by the figure is tiger skin, originally an attribute of the Hindu god Shiva that joined the Indian Vajrayana Buddhist pantheon during this period.

For more details, go to the Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture St-Z, page 1203.

Cite this article:

Hsingyun, et al. "Ten-Armed Avalokitesvara." Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture St-Z, vol. 13, 2016, pp. 1203.
Hsingyun, Youheng, Yann Lovelock, Yuan Chou, Susan Huntington, Gary Edson, and Robert Neather. 2016. "Ten-Armed Avalokitesvara" In Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture St-Z, 13:1203.
Hsingyun, Youheng, Lovelock, Y., Chou, Y., Huntington, S., Edson, G., & Neather, R.. (2016). Ten-Armed Avalokitesvara. In Encyclopedia of Buddhist Arts: Sculpture St-Z (Vol. 13, pp. 1203).
@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 St-Z},
pages = 1203,
title = {{Ten-Armed Avalokitesvara}},
volume = 13,
year = {2016}}


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