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Anguo Temple: Hayagriva |
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Anguo Temple: Hayagriva
CHINA, Shaanxi, Xi'an; Tang dynasty (618–907); Marble; H: 89 cm; Xi'an Beilin Museum, Shaanxi, China
The sculpture was unearthed from Anguo Temple in 1959 and depicts a three-headed Hayagriva with eight arms. The head in the center wears a tall headdress that has a Buddha image in front. Unlike the other two heads, it has a wrathful visage with bulging eyes and protruding fangs. A floating stole sweeps from behind the head to wind about the foremost arms, which are held in the anjali (reverence) mudra. A variety of objects are held in the other hands, including a long-stalked lotus bud, a vase, and a club on the right hands; a whisk, prayer beads, and varada (wish-granting) mudra in the left hands. The deity wears elaborate jewelry and sits cross-legged on a lotus blossom. The broken feature on the nimbus may have been Hayagriva's main attribute, a horse's head. Surrounding him is a flaming mandorla. |