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MakaraTibet - Gilded copper and semiprecious stones - Height 23 x 23 cm - 17th centuryOf the mythical beings which populate the legends of the Indian subcontinent, Makaras are certainly one of the best known and most frequently represented in art. In their iconography, these sea monsters with a hybrid appearance take on the distinctive features of different animals, such as the elephant’s trunk, the crocodile’s jaws and body and the snake’s tail. The Makara, a vehicle of both Varu- na, the Vedic god of water, and Ganga, the river goddess who personifies the Ganges, is also a symbol of Kâmadeva, the Vedic god of love and desire (1). The representative characteristics of this sea monster, namely power and perseverance, account for the presence of his image on weapons held by deities mainly belonging to the Vajrayâna sphere. Such weapons, whose blades or tips may emerge from the wide open jaws of Makara, include the axe, the hook, the curved knife for skinning and the vajra. (1) Robert Beer, The Handbook of Tibetan Buddhist Symbol, Serindia, Chicago - London 2003, p. 77 ALC (Free Circulation) |