Hayagriva - Black
(item no. 927)

Tibet

1800 - 1899

Buddhist Lineage

53.98x39.37cm (21.25x15.50in)

Ground Mineral Pigment on Cotton

Collection of Rubin Museum of Art

(acc.# P1999.33.4)

 


Black Hayagriva with an Iron Sword (Tibetan: tam drin nag po chag ral, English: Black Horse Neck One) of the Revealed Treasure Lineage of Nyang Ral Nyima Ozer (1124-1192) of the Nyingma School. A protection circle (yantra) fills the central torso of Hayagriva.

"...on a lotus and sun seat, is the King of the Wrathful, Hayagriva, with a very fierce body blue-black in colour. With one face, two hands and three eyes, the face is radiant with bared fangs, blazing orange beard and mustache. A green horse head on the crown neighs - gathering the power of the Three Realms. The right hand holds a sword aloft severing the heads and bodies of enemies into pieces. The left holds a hook to conduct the life force of enemies and hindrances. In a manner of play with the left extended the two feet are supported by enemies and hindrances. The body is dressed in a great cloak of black silk and a human hide with a lower garment of tiger skin. Having a crown of five dry skulls and a necklace of fifty wet, snake coils of the five naga races, complete with the eight glorious articles - standing in a vast blazing heap of fire." (Terdag Lingpa Gyurme Dorje (1646-1714) and Min-ling Lochen Dharmashri 1654-1718. Tibetan source text 'dod 'jo bum bzang, Part I, page 258).

Jeff Watt 4-2007

Front of Painting
English Translation of Inscription: [Sanskrit protection mantras written in Tibetan script in a yantra circle format]


View other items in:
Thematic Set
Collection of Rubin Museum of Art: Painting Gallery IX
Painting Type: Charts, General
Painting Type: Charts, Yantra Diagram
1800 - 1899 (19th Century) Part II
Buddhist Deity: Hayagriva (Black)



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