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BUDDHIST DEITY: USHNISHAVIJAYA MAIN PAGE Buddhist Deity: Ushnishavijaya Main Page. - Others The long-life deity/ishtadevata, Ushnishavijaya 'Victorious Crown Ornament,' is one of three special long-life deities along with the Buddha Amitayus and White Tara. This group is known as the Three Long Life Deities (Tibetan: tse lha nam sum). There are other deities associated withlong
BUDDHIST DEITY: AMARAVAJRA DEVI Buddhist Deity: Amaravajra Devi. - Others Amaravajra Devi (Tibetan: chi me dor je lha mo) is a long-life deity arising from the Chakrasamvara cycle of Tantras. She is slightly wrathful, white in colour, with eight faces and sixteen hands. Amaravajra Devi also belongs to the set of ' Thirteen Golden Dharmas ' of the Sakyatradition and
PADMASAMBHAVA: GURU DRAGPUR MAIN PAGE Description: Very wrathful in appearance, Guru Dragpur is red in colour, with one face and three round eyes, he has a gaping mouth with bared fangs and flaming hair rising upward. The right hand held aloft firmly grasps a gold vajra scepter and the left a black scorpion - both arms extended to the sides. Adorned with a crown of five skulls MAHAKALA (BUDDHIST PROTECTOR) Interpretation / Description. Panjarnata Mahakala (Tibetan: gur gyi gon po nag po chen po, English: the Great Black One, Lord of the Pavilion). Mahakala with one face and two hands holds a curved knife and skullcup to the heart. Resting across the forearms is a 'gandhi' stick. On the crown of the head is the buddha Vairochana. BUDDHIST DEITY: VAJRAPANI, MAHACHAKRA PAGE Vajrapani, Mahachakra (Tibetan: chag na dor je, kor lo chen po. English: The Great Wheel Vajra Holder). Mahachakra is a Tantric form of the bodhisattva Vajrapani appearing as a meditational deity - regarded as completely enlightened. Just as there are many forms of Vajrapani, so also are there many varieties of Mahachakra both withconsort and
MANDALA: TYPES OF MANDALAS GLOSSARY LIST Mandala: Types of Mandalas Glossary List (4 images) - HimalayanArt.org TAKKIRAJA (BUDDHIST DEITY) Takkiraja, in a solitary form (Tibetan: du pai gyal po. English: the King of Desire) a power deity arising from the Guhyasamaja cycle of Tantras. "as Mahakrodha Takkiraja with a body red in colour, like ruby, blazing with light like the disc of the sun. With one face, two hands and three eyes, the right holds aloft a hook to gather in the HIMALAYAN ART RESOURCESNEWSLETTER SIGNUPDONATEVAJRAVARAHI MAIN PAGE Himalayan Art Resources features thousands of artworks from Tibet, Nepal, Bhutan, India, China and Mongolia. The site presents art from leading private and museum collections, accompanied by scholarship, cataloging and interpretation. BUDDHIST DEITY: CHAKRASAMVARA MAIN PAGE Buddhist Deity: Chakrasamvara Main Page. Chakrasamvara (Tibetan: khor lo dem chog. English: the Wheel of Bliss). The principal tantra of the Anuttarayoga Wisdom (mother) classification of the Vajrayana Buddhist Tradition. Chakrasamvara is one of the most popular deities in Tantric Buddhism in the Himalayan regions and Tibet after the 11th MAHAKALA: PANJARNATA, LORD OF THE PAVILION (MAIN PAGE) Mahakala: Panjarnata, Lord of the Pavilion (Main Page) Panjaranata Mahakala is the protector for the Shri Hevajra cycle of Tantras. The iconography and rituals are found in the 18th chapter of the Vajra Panjara Tantra (canopy, or pavilion) a Sanskrit language text from India, and an exclusive 'explanatory tantra' to the Hevajra Tantraitself.
BUDDHIST DEITY: USHNISHAVIJAYA MAIN PAGE Buddhist Deity: Ushnishavijaya Main Page. - Others The long-life deity/ishtadevata, Ushnishavijaya 'Victorious Crown Ornament,' is one of three special long-life deities along with the Buddha Amitayus and White Tara. This group is known as the Three Long Life Deities (Tibetan: tse lha nam sum). There are other deities associated withlong
BUDDHIST DEITY: AMARAVAJRA DEVI Buddhist Deity: Amaravajra Devi. - Others Amaravajra Devi (Tibetan: chi me dor je lha mo) is a long-life deity arising from the Chakrasamvara cycle of Tantras. She is slightly wrathful, white in colour, with eight faces and sixteen hands. Amaravajra Devi also belongs to the set of ' Thirteen Golden Dharmas ' of the Sakyatradition and
PADMASAMBHAVA: GURU DRAGPUR MAIN PAGE Description: Very wrathful in appearance, Guru Dragpur is red in colour, with one face and three round eyes, he has a gaping mouth with bared fangs and flaming hair rising upward. The right hand held aloft firmly grasps a gold vajra scepter and the left a black scorpion - both arms extended to the sides. Adorned with a crown of five skulls MAHAKALA (BUDDHIST PROTECTOR) Interpretation / Description. Panjarnata Mahakala (Tibetan: gur gyi gon po nag po chen po, English: the Great Black One, Lord of the Pavilion). Mahakala with one face and two hands holds a curved knife and skullcup to the heart. Resting across the forearms is a 'gandhi' stick. On the crown of the head is the buddha Vairochana. BUDDHIST DEITY: VAJRAPANI, MAHACHAKRA PAGE Vajrapani, Mahachakra (Tibetan: chag na dor je, kor lo chen po. English: The Great Wheel Vajra Holder). Mahachakra is a Tantric form of the bodhisattva Vajrapani appearing as a meditational deity - regarded as completely enlightened. Just as there are many forms of Vajrapani, so also are there many varieties of Mahachakra both withconsort and
MANDALA: TYPES OF MANDALAS GLOSSARY LIST Mandala: Types of Mandalas Glossary List (4 images) - HimalayanArt.org TAKKIRAJA (BUDDHIST DEITY) Takkiraja, in a solitary form (Tibetan: du pai gyal po. English: the King of Desire) a power deity arising from the Guhyasamaja cycle of Tantras. "as Mahakrodha Takkiraja with a body red in colour, like ruby, blazing with light like the disc of the sun. With one face, two hands and three eyes, the right holds aloft a hook to gather in the PADMASAMBHAVA MAIN PAGE Padmasambhava Main Page. Padmasambhava (Tibetan: pe ma jung ne. English: Lotus Born): also known as Guru Rinpoche (Precious Teacher). Along with Trisong Detsen and Shantarakshita, Padmasambhava is considered one of the principal early teachers to bring Buddhism to Tibet in the 8th century, Padmasambhava has numerous formsrepresenting outer
MAHAKALA: PANJARNATA, LORD OF THE PAVILION (MAIN PAGE) Mahakala: Panjarnata, Lord of the Pavilion (Main Page) Panjaranata Mahakala is the protector for the Shri Hevajra cycle of Tantras. The iconography and rituals are found in the 18th chapter of the Vajra Panjara Tantra (canopy, or pavilion) a Sanskrit language text from India, and an exclusive 'explanatory tantra' to the Hevajra Tantraitself.
PADMASAMBHAVA: EIGHT FORMS MAIN PAGE The Eleven Figurative Forms (Iconographic Appearance): - Buddha Appearance = Shakya Sengge. - King Appearance = Loden Chogse & Pema Gyalpo. - Monastic Appearance = Pema Jungne. - Siddha Appearance = Nyima Ozer. - Peaceful Deity Appearance = Oddiyana Dorje Chang. - Wrathful Deity Appearance = Sengge Dradog & Dorje Drolo.HIMALAYAN ART: NEWS
Himalayan Art Resources features thousands of artworks from Tibet, Nepal, Bhutan, India, China and Mongolia. The site presents art from leading private and museum collections, accompanied by scholarship, cataloging and interpretation. BUDDHIST DEITY: TINUMA (VAJRAYOGINI) MAIN PAGE Tinuma | Vajrayogini Main Page Subjects, Topics & Types: - Tinuma Description (below) - Three Small Red Ones - Thirteen Golden Dharmas - Vajrayogini Index of Names - Masterworks - Confusions - Others Vajrayogini, Tinuma: belonging to the Chakrasamvara Cycle of Tantras, and in Tibet commonly associated with the 'Three Smaller Red Ones' from the collection of deities known in the Sakya PUBLICATION: TIBETAN PAINTINGS Publication: Tibetan Paintings (106 images) - HimalayanArt.org. A Study of Tibetan Thangkas Eleventh to Nineteenth Centuries ByPratapaditya Pal
PAINTING SET: KHON FAMILY LINEAGE (SONAM WANGPO & TUTOB Painting Set: Khon Family Lineage (Sonam Wangpo & Tutob Wangchug) (12 images) - HimalayanArt.org HIMALAYAN ART: ITEM NO. 200551 Any Category - Private. Interpretation / Description. View other items in the Thematic Set: Publication: Artful Beneficence (Painting) TEXTILE: FINISHING (TEXTILE MOUNTS) Textile: Finishing (Textile Mounts) (3 images) - HimalayanArt.org. Textile: Composition & Finishing Subjects, Topics & Types: - Description - Framing ARHAT: HVASHANG RELIGIOUS CONTEXT Arhat: Hvashang Religious Context (3 images) - HimalayanArt.org. Hvashang Main Page Subjects, Topics & TYpes: - Religious Context (below) - Elders Main Page - Elders Resource Page - Dharmata (Attendant) - Shakyamuni & Sixteen Elders - Foundational Buddhism Main Page - Confusions: Elders, Sage of Long Life, Tang Tong Gyalpo HIMALAYAN ART RESOURCESNEWSLETTER SIGNUPDONATEVAJRAVARAHI MAIN PAGE Himalayan Art Resources features thousands of artworks from Tibet, Nepal, Bhutan, India, China and Mongolia. The site presents art from leading private and museum collections, accompanied by scholarship, cataloging and interpretation. BUDDHIST DEITY: VIGHNANTAKA MAIN PAGE Vighnantaka is a meditational deity that functions as a remover of obstacles. In the two armed form Vighnantaka is identical to Krodha Vajrapani also in a two armed form. Both figures hold a vajra scepter upraised in the right hand and a wrathful gesture at the heart holding a lasso with the left hand. As a member of the Ten Wrathful Ones he is BUDDHIST DEITY: GUHYASAMAJA MAIN PAGE Buddhist Deity: Guhyasamaja Main Page. Guhyasamaja (Tibetan: sang wa du pa, English: Secret Gathering), foremost meditational deity of the Method-father class of Anuttarayoga tantra. Guhyasamaja has two main traditions, the Arya (Nagarjuna) Lineage and the Jnana (Jnanapada) Lineage. There are three principal iconographic forms of Guhyasamaja BUDDHIST DEITY: KURUKULLA MAIN PAGE Kurukulla is a Tantric Buddhist meditational deity originating in India. She has a standard recognized appearance that is very common along with other forms that are less well known. There are numerous forms and lineages of Kurukulla arising from the Kriya and Anuttarayoga classes of Buddhist tantra of the New (Sarma) traditionsand many forms
RITUAL OBJECT: MAIN PAGE Deities as Ritual Objects: - Jambhala Water Offering (sculpture) - Vajradaka (sculpture) - Vajrakila Purba. - Others Database Search: All Objects. Jeff Watt 4-2015 (The images below are only a selection of examples from the links above & the Index List ). BUDDHIST DEITY: TARA, GREEN MAIN PAGE Buddhist Deity: Tara, Green Main Page. Tara is a completely enlightened buddha and having promised to appear in the form of a female bodhisattva and goddess for the benefit of all beings she especially protects from the eight fears. Practiced in all Schools of Tibetan Buddhism Tara is second in popularity only to Avalokiteshvara. PADMASAMBHAVA: GURU DRAGPUR MAIN PAGE Description: Very wrathful in appearance, Guru Dragpur is red in colour, with one face and three round eyes, he has a gaping mouth with bared fangs and flaming hair rising upward. The right hand held aloft firmly grasps a gold vajra scepter and the left a black scorpion - both arms extended to the sides. Adorned with a crown of five skulls TIBET: DENSATIL MONASTERY STYLE SCULPTURE Tibet: Densatil Monastery Style Sculpture. - Others Densatil Monastery, founded by Pagmodrubpa Dorje Gyalpo, built the eight Tashi Gomang Stupas between the 1270s and the 1430s. That is a one hundred and sixty year (160) spread of time. Drigung Monastery BUDDHIST DEITY: AMARAVAJRA DEVI Buddhist Deity: Amaravajra Devi. - Others Amaravajra Devi (Tibetan: chi me dor je lha mo) is a long-life deity arising from the Chakrasamvara cycle of Tantras. She is slightly wrathful, white in colour, with eight faces and sixteen hands. Amaravajra Devi also belongs to the set of ' Thirteen Golden Dharmas ' of the Sakyatradition and
BUDDHIST DEITY: GANAPATI, MAHARAKTA MAIN PAGE Buddhist Deity: Ganapati, Maharakta Main Page. Ganapati, Maha Rakta (Tibetan: tsog gi dag po, mar chen. English: The Great Red Lord of Hosts). A Tantric Buddhist form of the elephant headed god of Shaivism, Ganapati (Ganesha). This form of Ganapati is related to the Chakrasamvara Cycle of Tantras and regarded as a form or emanation of HIMALAYAN ART RESOURCESNEWSLETTER SIGNUPDONATEVAJRAVARAHI MAIN PAGE Himalayan Art Resources features thousands of artworks from Tibet, Nepal, Bhutan, India, China and Mongolia. The site presents art from leading private and museum collections, accompanied by scholarship, cataloging and interpretation. BUDDHIST DEITY: VIGHNANTAKA MAIN PAGE Vighnantaka is a meditational deity that functions as a remover of obstacles. In the two armed form Vighnantaka is identical to Krodha Vajrapani also in a two armed form. Both figures hold a vajra scepter upraised in the right hand and a wrathful gesture at the heart holding a lasso with the left hand. As a member of the Ten Wrathful Ones he is BUDDHIST DEITY: GUHYASAMAJA MAIN PAGE Buddhist Deity: Guhyasamaja Main Page. Guhyasamaja (Tibetan: sang wa du pa, English: Secret Gathering), foremost meditational deity of the Method-father class of Anuttarayoga tantra. Guhyasamaja has two main traditions, the Arya (Nagarjuna) Lineage and the Jnana (Jnanapada) Lineage. There are three principal iconographic forms of Guhyasamaja BUDDHIST DEITY: KURUKULLA MAIN PAGE Kurukulla is a Tantric Buddhist meditational deity originating in India. She has a standard recognized appearance that is very common along with other forms that are less well known. There are numerous forms and lineages of Kurukulla arising from the Kriya and Anuttarayoga classes of Buddhist tantra of the New (Sarma) traditionsand many forms
RITUAL OBJECT: MAIN PAGE Deities as Ritual Objects: - Jambhala Water Offering (sculpture) - Vajradaka (sculpture) - Vajrakila Purba. - Others Database Search: All Objects. Jeff Watt 4-2015 (The images below are only a selection of examples from the links above & the Index List ). BUDDHIST DEITY: TARA, GREEN MAIN PAGE Buddhist Deity: Tara, Green Main Page. Tara is a completely enlightened buddha and having promised to appear in the form of a female bodhisattva and goddess for the benefit of all beings she especially protects from the eight fears. Practiced in all Schools of Tibetan Buddhism Tara is second in popularity only to Avalokiteshvara. PADMASAMBHAVA: GURU DRAGPUR MAIN PAGE Description: Very wrathful in appearance, Guru Dragpur is red in colour, with one face and three round eyes, he has a gaping mouth with bared fangs and flaming hair rising upward. The right hand held aloft firmly grasps a gold vajra scepter and the left a black scorpion - both arms extended to the sides. Adorned with a crown of five skulls TIBET: DENSATIL MONASTERY STYLE SCULPTURE Tibet: Densatil Monastery Style Sculpture. - Others Densatil Monastery, founded by Pagmodrubpa Dorje Gyalpo, built the eight Tashi Gomang Stupas between the 1270s and the 1430s. That is a one hundred and sixty year (160) spread of time. Drigung Monastery BUDDHIST DEITY: AMARAVAJRA DEVI Buddhist Deity: Amaravajra Devi. - Others Amaravajra Devi (Tibetan: chi me dor je lha mo) is a long-life deity arising from the Chakrasamvara cycle of Tantras. She is slightly wrathful, white in colour, with eight faces and sixteen hands. Amaravajra Devi also belongs to the set of ' Thirteen Golden Dharmas ' of the Sakyatradition and
BUDDHIST DEITY: GANAPATI, MAHARAKTA MAIN PAGE Buddhist Deity: Ganapati, Maharakta Main Page. Ganapati, Maha Rakta (Tibetan: tsog gi dag po, mar chen. English: The Great Red Lord of Hosts). A Tantric Buddhist form of the elephant headed god of Shaivism, Ganapati (Ganesha). This form of Ganapati is related to the Chakrasamvara Cycle of Tantras and regarded as a form or emanation of PADMASAMBHAVA MAIN PAGE Padmasambhava Main Page. Padmasambhava (Tibetan: pe ma jung ne. English: Lotus Born): also known as Guru Rinpoche (Precious Teacher). Along with Trisong Detsen and Shantarakshita, Padmasambhava is considered one of the principal early teachers to bring Buddhism to Tibet in the 8th century, Padmasambhava has numerous formsrepresenting outer
BUDDHIST DEITY: CHAKRASAMVARA MAIN PAGE Buddhist Deity: Chakrasamvara Main Page. Chakrasamvara (Tibetan: khor lo dem chog. English: the Wheel of Bliss). The principal tantra of the Anuttarayoga Wisdom (mother) classification of the Vajrayana Buddhist Tradition. Chakrasamvara is one of the most popular deities in Tantric Buddhism in the Himalayan regions and Tibet after the 11th BUDDHIST DEITY: KURUKULLA MAIN PAGE Kurukulla is a Tantric Buddhist meditational deity originating in India. She has a standard recognized appearance that is very common along with other forms that are less well known. There are numerous forms and lineages of Kurukulla arising from the Kriya and Anuttarayoga classes of Buddhist tantra of the New (Sarma) traditionsand many forms
BUDDHIST DEITY: GUHYASAMAJA MAIN PAGE Buddhist Deity: Guhyasamaja Main Page. Guhyasamaja (Tibetan: sang wa du pa, English: Secret Gathering), foremost meditational deity of the Method-father class of Anuttarayoga tantra. Guhyasamaja has two main traditions, the Arya (Nagarjuna) Lineage and the Jnana (Jnanapada) Lineage. There are three principal iconographic forms of GuhyasamajaHIMALAYAN ART: NEWS
Himalayan Art Resources features thousands of artworks from Tibet, Nepal, Bhutan, India, China and Mongolia. The site presents art from leading private and museum collections, accompanied by scholarship, cataloging and interpretation. PUBLICATION: TIBETAN PAINTINGS Publication: Tibetan Paintings (106 images) - HimalayanArt.org. A Study of Tibetan Thangkas Eleventh to Nineteenth Centuries ByPratapaditya Pal
BUDDHIST DEITY: TINUMA (VAJRAYOGINI) MAIN PAGE Tinuma | Vajrayogini Main Page Subjects, Topics & Types: - Tinuma Description (below) - Three Small Red Ones - Thirteen Golden Dharmas - Vajrayogini Index of Names - Masterworks - Confusions - Others Vajrayogini, Tinuma: belonging to the Chakrasamvara Cycle of Tantras, and in Tibet commonly associated with the 'Three Smaller Red Ones' from the collection of deities known in the Sakya REGION: KASHMIR STYLE (BUDDHA) Region: Kashmir Style (Buddha) (29 images) - HimalayanArt.org. Maitreya (Bodhisattva & Buddhist Deity) Buddha ← HIMALAYAN ART: SEARCH RESULTS Himalayan Art Resources features thousands of artworks from Tibet, Nepal, Bhutan, India, China and Mongolia. The site presents art from leading private and museum collections, accompanied by scholarship, cataloging and interpretation. TEXTILE: FINISHING (TEXTILE MOUNTS) Textile: Finishing (Textile Mounts) (3 images) - HimalayanArt.org. Textile: Composition & Finishing Subjects, Topics & Types: - Description - FramingHome Introduction
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