Yogambara
(item no. 776)

Tibet

1500 - 1599

Buddhist Lineage

27.94x21.59cm (11x8.50in)

Ground Mineral Pigment on Cotton

Collection of Rubin Museum of Art


 


Yogambara, a tutelary deity belonging to the Wisdom-mother class of Anuttarayoga tantra, made famous in the Vajravali text of the Indian Pandita Abhayakaragupta.

Semi-wrathful in appearance, dark blue in colour, he has three faces, blue, white and red. The main pair of hands holds a vajra and bell in a gesture of embrace. The second right caresses the breast of the consort Jnana Dakini. The third holds aloft an arrow. The second left holds a white skullcup and the third upraised a bow. Seated in vajra posture atop a sun disc, lotus and a white snow lion, he is surrounded by a red-orange nimbus.

The deity Yogambara arises from the Chaturpita Tantra and is typically surrounded by a 77 deity mandala. The practice was popularized in Tibet by Marpa the Translator and his student Ngog Lotsawa.

Jeff Watt 7-2003


View other items in:
Thematic Set
Collection of Rubin Museum of Art: Painting Gallery VIII
Buddhist Deity: Yogambara
1500 - 1599 (16th Century)



Copyright © 2008 Shelley and Donald Rubin Foundation.
Photographed Image Copyright © 2004 Rubin Museum of Art