Exotic India Art is a worldwide well-known One-stop Ecommerce brand dealing with Indian handmade products since 1998. You will get the finest handpicked products based on Indian Culture, Tradition, Region, and Region. You will get the product's doorstep delivery facilities without adding any extra charges with complete transparency. You will get products based on Indian Arts, Paintings, Books, Sculptures, Textiles, Beads, Jewelry, Beauty, Healthcare, Audio, Video, Home & Living, Ayurveda, and much more. Here you will get products made from India and Nepal.
In the Exotic India Art Sculptures gallery, you will get beautifully carved and sculpted Statues and Sculptures. You will various numbers of Statues and Sculptures collections of many different sizes and made of many different materials. You will have Small Sculptures to Large Statues. All these Statues are made of many different materials like Gold, Silver, Iron, Bronze, Copper, Brass Sculptures, Woods, Stones, Marble (Black/White), and others. You will get Statues and Sculptures related to the Indian Hindu God and Goddess, Nepalese God and Goddess, Buddhist, South Indian Sculptures, Corporate Gifts, Dolls, Tribal, Rituals, Tantras, and much more.
Here in this Buddhist Sculptures - The bhumisparsha mudra is an interesting gesture assumed by no other deity than the Buddha. In Sanskrit, 'bhumi' means earth and 'sparsha' means to touch. The Buddha sits in the gracious shade of the Bodhi tree, His long limbs folded in the perfect padmasana. He is steeped in meditation as could be deduced from his composure of countenance, sculpted flawlessly from brass given multiple finishes. The piece of cloth that enrobes Him is a simple bordered garment, whose style is consummate with the finish of the sculpture. One hand rests on His lap in dhyana mudra; the other gently touches the ground that runs beneath His asana (seat) in the famous bhumisparsha mudra.
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Buddha In Bhumisparsha Mudra Brass Statue |
The Buddha was born to the
ruler of the North Indian Shakya clan in the Himalayan foothills, in the
capital of Kapilavastu. It was foretold that He would become a highly
accomplished ruler or a monk of all-surpassing greatness. Eager to ensure that
His only son does not turn to a life of the latter, His father the King
Suddhodana gave Him the finest upbringing a mortal could ask for. Shortly after
marrying the beautiful Yashodhara who His father had lovingly chosen for Him,
He renounced the life of plenty He was born into and wandered off into the
woods. He lived like an ascetic, and then returned amidst human settlements
along North India's plentiful plains, in terms of both nature and society,
wherein He lived the life of a homeless monk.
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