Secret Accomplishment Hayagriva
Secret Accomplishment Hayagriva

Secret Accomplishment Hayagriva


Artist
Mongolian (Mongolian)
Date
Circa 1900-1940
Medium
Cotton and silk applique
Dimensions
Image : 33 1/4 x 28 1/8 in. (84.46 x 71.44 cm)
Work : 48 1/4 x 33 in. (1.2 m x 83.82 cm)
Credit Line
Hope College Collection
Object Number
2019.10.1

Label

Hayagriva was originally a Hindu deity who became part of the Buddhist pantheon sometime around the 6th century CE.  In Tantric Buddhism, Hayagriva is considered to be a wrathful manifestation of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, and can appear in several forms, primarily as a meditational deity. The form of Hayagriva depicted here is called Secret Accomplishment (Guhyasadana) Hayagriva. He has one head, three faces, six arms and eight legs. His most distinctive attributes are the three horseheads that grow from his upswept hair. The hands of Hayagriva’s three right arms hold a vajra scepter, a mace and a sword. The hand of his top left arm is held out in a warning gesture while the other two left hands hold a spear and a lasso. He also wears a skull crown and bone jewelry, and sports a belt of freshly severed human heads around his tiger-skin loincloth. His eight feet trample on bundles of multi-colored snakes and he is surrounded by a luminous mandorla.

 

References: Fleming (2011), pp. 570-571; Meinert (2011), pp. 484-485; Kreijger (2001), pp. 106-107; Lipton (1996), pp. 111-114; Berger and Bartholomew (1995), pp. 234-235. 


 

Object Type
Textile