Skip to main content

언어 선택

가이드가 사용자의 언어로 번역을 제공하지 않는 경우, 일반적으로 Google에서 번역합니다. 하지만 일부 가이드는 원래 언어로만 제공됩니다.

대본

표제

  • Krishna on Garuda, Bronze, Indonesia (Java)

Krishna on Garuda

#8000

second half of the 9th century

Bronze

설명

Garuda, the Hindu god who is part man and part bird, symbolizes the power of the sun and is known for slaying evil serpents. In art he usually appears as the mount or vehicle of Vishnu. Here Garuda carries Krishna, an avatar of Vishnu, who not only has borrowed Vishnu's mount but also holds his war discus (chakra). He stands energetically astride Garuda's head and shoulders, and with the index finger of his open left hand makes a warning gesture. Legend tells us that on many occasions Krishna rode out on the back of Garuda to do battle. In a tale well known to the Javanese, Garuda stole the elixir of immortality from the gods, who had thought it was well protected by two poisonous serpents from the realm of the gods. Here he holds the two defunct serpents—the head of one is missing—and balances the elixir in a jar on his head. The folded position of Garuda's legs suggests that he is rising in flight. His short wings beat the air, and his long tail streams behind him in openwork loops. The curves and lively projections of all the other shapes and details of this bronze make the figures appear to be charging through space.

This ensemble was part of a hanging oil lamp. Above Krishna's head is a lotus pattern to which a chain for suspension was attached, and beneath Garuda is a loop from which a cup for lamp oil would have hung. The lighted lamp would cast shadows of the god and his vehicle.

8000. Krishna on Garuda

Gallery 247

추가 정보

크기
H. 15 7/16 in. (39.2 cm)
크레딧
Purchase, Lita Annenberg Hazen Charitable Trust Gift, 1992
자료 번호
1992.135

소프트웨어 라이선스