Skip to main content

选择语言

如果指南没有提供您语言的翻译,通常会使用 Google翻译。不过,有些指南只提供其原始语言版本。

文稿

标题

  • Loving Couple (Mithuna), Ferruginous stone, India (Orissa)

Loving Couple (Mithuna)

#7973

13th century

Ferruginous stone

描述

A Hindu temple was often envisioned as the world's central axis, in the form of a mountain inhabited by a god. The temple itself was therefore worshipped. This was done by circumambulation (walking around the exterior, in this case in a counterclockwise direction) and by viewing its small inner sanctum. The outside of the temple was usually covered with myriad reliefs: some portrayed aspects of the god within or related deities; others represented the mountain's mythological inhabitants. From early times, iconic representations of deities and holy figures were augmented by auspicious images, such as beautiful women, musicians, and loving couples (mithunas). Once part of the subsidiary decoration of a temple facade, the figures of this bejeweled couple embrace while peering rapturously into each other's eyes. Their full bodies and broad, detailed features are characteristic of architectural sculptures produced in thirteenth-century Orissa, a region in northeast India that was noted for its temples, particularly those built from the tenth through the thirteenth century, often distinguished by figures in astonishingly acrobatic and erotic poses. Couples such as this pair are understood to have multiple meanings, ranging from an obvious celebration of life's pleasures to the more metaphorical symbolism of a human soul's longing for union with the divine.

7973. Loving Couple (Mithuna)

Gallery 241

附加信息

维度
H. 72 in. (182.9 cm)
信用
Purchase, Florance Waterbury Bequest, 1970
登录号
1970.44

软件许可