Shri Devi (Buddhist Protector) - Dudsolma
(item no. 65007)

Tibet

1400 - 1499

Sakya Lineage

10.16x8.26cm (4x3.25in)

Ground: Cotton

Collection of Rubin Museum of Art

(acc.#C2001.3.1)

 
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Shri Devi (English: Glorious Goddess. Tibetan: pal den lha mo). The principal consort for the enlightened protector Mahakala and the main female protector of the Sakya School.

"...the Glorious Goddess, Mistress of the Desire Realm, riding a donkey with a white patch; with a body blue-black in colour, one face and four hands; the first right holds a sword, second a skullcup filled with blood; the first left holds a spear, the second a trident; with a crown of five dry human skulls and a necklace of fifty wet and six bone ornaments; an elephant hide as an upper garment and a rakshasa hide as a skirt, a lower garment of woven hair; the Lord of Nagas tied as a girdle; possessing three eyes, a stiff human corpse in the mouth, bared fangs. The right ear is adorned with a poisonous snake and the left a lion. On the body arranged in bunches are drops of blood, clots of mold, and ashes of the dead; very emaciated..." (Ngorchen Konchog Lhundrup, 1497-1557).

Jeff Watt 3-2002


View other items in:
Thematic Set
Buddhist Protector: Shri Devi (Main Image Page)
Collection of Rubin Museum of Art: Painting Gallery I
Buddhist Protector: Shri Devi, Dudsolma
Buddhist Protector: Shri Devi, Dudsol Dokam Wangchugma
Buddhist Protector: Shri Devi (Sakya)



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Photographed Image Copyright © 2004 Rubin Museum of Art