Hayagriva (Buddhist Deity) - Heruka
(item no. 15215)

Eastern Tibet

1800 - 1899

Nyingma and Karma (Kagyu) Lineages

Ground Mineral Pigment on Cotton

Karma Gardri Painting School

Collection of Shechen Archives - photographs


 
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Hayagriva, Heruka (Tibetan: tam drin, drag tung. English: the Horse-necked One, Blood-drinker): from the Lama Gongdu Cycle of Revealed Treasure (Tibetan: ter ma) teachings of the Nyingma tradition.

Sanskrit: Heruka Tibetan: Drag tung

Fearsome and wrathful in appearance, red in colour, with three faces and six hands, three horse heads adorn the crown of the central face. He embraces the consort with the first pair of hands while holding a golden vajra scepter and a white blood filled skull. The two remaining outstretched right hands hold a katvanga staff and a blue snake. The two left hands hold a bell and a length of blue chain. The dark-red two-armed consort holds a skullcup and a trident. Standing on two prone naga forms, a sun disc and multi-coloured lotus seat, they are surrounded by the brightly burning orange flames of pristine awareness fire.

Eight main retinue couples surround the central pair. Minor figures stand in various dancing postures in the foreground. Seated at the top left and right are two lineage lamas wearing red pandita hats.

Sanggye Lingpa (1340-1396) discovered the ?Middling Collection of Precepts, the Gathering of the Guru?s Intention? (Tibetan: ka du bar wa la ma gong pa du pa) in the great cave of Puri Rinchen Barwa in the year 1364.

Jeff Watt 11-2000


View other items in:
Thematic Set
Collection of Shechen Archives: Gallery I
Tradition: Kagyu Deity Paintings
Tradition: Nyingma Deity Paintings
Buddhist Deity: Heruka
Painting Set: Lama Gongdu 1



Copyright © 2012 Shelley and Donald Rubin Foundation.
Photographed Image Copyright © 2004 Shechen Archives