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Stroke: Vols:Sculpture
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Eight-Armed Avalokitesvara
Eight-Armed Avalokitesvara
 

Eight-Armed Avalokitesvara

CAMBODIA; Late 12th–early 13th century; Stone; H: 124 cm; Guimet Museum of Asian Art, Paris, France
The style of this sculpture was an innovation introduced during the reign of the Buddhist monarch King Jayavarman VII (reigned 1181- circa 1220). The Bodhisattva wears a high cylindrical crown fronted by an image of Amitabha Buddha. The head is bent slightly forward and the face is rectangular. The eyes are cast down above a prominent nose and a broad, smiling mouth. There are four more Buddhas on the webbed upper body, and the webbing itself is made up of a multitude of miniature Buddhas, symbolizing the concept of the boundless Dharma within the never-ending universe. Only the stumps of the original eight arms remain, emerging from the webbing on either side as a group but held at various elevations. The short sampot is secured with a flower-patterned belt from which a fishtail of fabric hangs between the muscular legs.
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