Exotic India Art is an E-commerce One-Stop brand dealing with Indian handmade products since 1998. Here in the Exotic India Art collections, you will get the finest hand-carved products that are based on Indian Culture, Tradition, Region, and Religion. You will get products doorstep delivery facilities with transparent services. Here in Exotic India Art collections, you will get handmade products based on Indian Arts, Paintings, Books, Textiles, Sculptures, Beads, Jewelry, Healthcare, Audio, Video, Ayurveda, and much more.
Here in
the Exotic India Arts collection, you will get the finest carved and
architected Statues and Sculptures with multiple variations. You will get a
collection of different variations of Indian handmade products from Large
Statues to Small Sculptures. You will get Indian handmade products that are
made of many different materials like Woods, Stones, Black/White marble,
Copper, Bronze, Brass Sculptures, Iron, Silver, Gold, and much more. You will
get collections of Indian Hindu God and Goddess,
Buddhist, Nepalese God and Goddess, Rituals, Tribals, Tantras, South Indian
Sculptures, Corporate Gifts, Dolls, and much more.
Cast in
copper-anodized brass, this contemporary artifact, with a rare antique
appearance, which it acquires from the copper’s subdued luster and mystic
Tantrika look represents Lord Shiva as ‘Ling’ – his aniconic form. Shiva’s
both forms, the aniconic ‘ling’ and his iconic image, one symbolizing his
unmanifest form, and the other, anthropomorphic, have been in prevalence since
Indus days. There figure among the excavated material from various Indus sites
terracotta icons of votive ‘ling’ and ‘yoni’ as well as terracotta seals with a
‘Yogi’ figure with soiled coiffure engaged in penance cast on them. Such
figures, with a number of animals, especially a bull, around, are almost
unanimously identified as Pashupati, patron of animals – Shiva’s other most
prominent name. Shiva’s personalised form portrays an act or an aspect of his
being, as Mahayogi form in Indus seals, but ‘ling’ is symbolic of his formless
timeless existence out of which all forms evolve, and hence, ‘ling’ is
essentially Shiva’s votive form.
![]() |
Shivalinga Brass Sculpture |
Its
antique appearance and medieval modeling apart, a simple Shivalinga
Brass Sculpture icon, it has an unusual form. The proper Shiva-ling
form: a ‘ling’ icon enshrining ‘yoni’, has been installed on a lotus raised
over a circular two-tiered pedestal for giving it proper height perspective.
Lotus is essentially an element of Vaishnava iconography rarely seen with
Shiva’s form, not even as part of the offering made during ritual worship. In
Vaishnava iconography, as well as otherwise, lotus is symbolic of three cosmic
zones: ocean, earth, and sky. Here in this icon, with dark zones alternating
the bright, symbolic of day and night, lotus symbolises time which Shiva as
‘ling’ pervades. Its modeling too has a distinction of its own. Compared to its
female component – yoni-part, the male counterpart is tinier in size; however,
a prominently delineated ‘Tripunda’ mark and three snakes with upraised hoods
crowning it afford it a sense of proportion. In rare innovative maneuvering,
the artist has used the forms of two of the three snakes for defining the
peripheral elevation of the ‘yoni’, while the third he has used around the root
of the ‘ling’ covering the joint.
The
symbol of imperishable life, inexhaustible energy, and unceasing act, snakes
denote that the desire to create which the union of Shiva and Shakti symbolises
is incessant, persistent, and ever live. In Shaivite, though Shiva is the ‘Purusha’
– the enlivening Self, and Parvati, ‘Prakriti’, the manifest and unmanifest
matter out of which Shiva affects creation. The Shakta perception attributes to
Shakti priority over Shiva. In Shakta thought, the desire to create is the
attribute of Shakti which is incessant in her. It is she who kindles in Shiva
the desire to unite and create and is thus Shiva’s enlivening force. The Shakta
Tantrism goes still farther acclaiming Shiva as the mere dead mass that Shakti
enlivens by her union. Thus, whatever the contentions regarding relative
priorities of Shiva and his female aspect – his consort Parvati or Shakti, the
union of the two – Lord Shiva
and Shakti: the male and female principles which the Shiva-ling form manifests,
is the crux of Shaivism.
Comments
Post a Comment