Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.
Hand Made Gold Plated and Hand Painted Face 7.75" Troma Nagmo Yogini Statue
Recipient :
* Required fields
or Cancel
761768127094
New
1 Item Items
Warning: Last items in stock!
Availability date:
Name |
Troma Nagmo Yogini Statue |
Height |
8โ with Khatvanga |
7.75โ with frame |
|
7.5โ without frame |
|
Width |
5โ |
Depth |
2.75โ |
Material |
Lost Wax Method, Copper Alloy with Gold Plated and Hand Painted Face |
Actual Weight |
1.028 Kg. |
Ships From |
Patan, Nepal |
Shipping Provider |
Express Shipping Service |
Shipping Time |
Usually ships within 48 hours. Allow 5 โ 7 business days for delivery worldwide. |
Insurance |
Insurance is included in the shipping cost. |
Troma Nagmo (Tib.ย khros ma nag mo), the Wrathful Black Mother (Skt.ย Krishna Kali, Krishna Krodhini), dominates the centre of this gold-on-black composition. She is extremely fierce, as youthful and nubile as a sixteen-year-old, and black in colour like the darkness at the end of time. With her right leg drawn up and her left leg bent in bow-and-arrow posture, she dances upon the golden sun-disc of her lotus seat, with her left foot pressing down upon the breasts of a naked female demon that has been thrown down onto its back. This fierce demon reveals her sharp teeth and vagina, and her breasts are the seat of desire, thus her corpse represents the concept of the self-cherishing attitude that is sacrificed through the practice of theย chodย ritual. Troma is the Great Mother of Compassion. Member of the Buddha family, her practice is one of the highest level practices in Vajrayana. Through the practice of Troma we find a remedy for our afflictive emotions, cutting attachment to ego and phenomena. We awake from ignorance to recognize our own true nature; Dharmakaya.
The practice of Troma leads to the understanding of the nature of emptiness that pervades all beings and phenomena. This understanding results in accomplishing the two accumulations of merit and wisdom. Thus, the practice of Troma is a path capable of rendering full realization of enlightenment.
Troma Nagmo's facial expression is ferocious and terrifying, with three round and angry red eyes that gaze piercingly towards the left, and a large gaping mouth that reveals her sharp teeth and fangs, and her twisting red tongue. Her nose is wrinkled as she frowns, and her red facial hair blazes upward like tongues of fire. The tawny-yellow locks of her matted hair swirl upwards like thunderclouds above her five-skull tiara, and from the crown of her head protrudes the wrathful black or brown head of a squealing so that gazes up into the sky towards her right. Troma Nagmo's face represents her single potential and the relative truth, while the sow's face represents her perception of emptiness as 'absolute truth'. Her black colour indicates her unchangeable nature, and her two heads the transformation of ignorance (sow's head) into wisdom or pristine awareness (Dakini'sย head). Her three eyes perceive the three worlds and times; her four sharp canine teeth liberate the fourย marasย or demonic obstructions; her twisting red tongue indicates that she leads beings from cyclic existence; her blazing facial hair indicates her triumph over hopes and fears, and her two legs represent the purity ofย samsaraย andย nirvana.
ย ย
As upper garments Troma Nagmo wears the freshly flayed and bloody skins of an elephant and a human, while around her waist she wears a tiger-skin skirt that has been loosened to reveal her pubic area. The arms of the human-skin are draped around her shoulders like a shawl, with its head at her right side and its legs billowing out near her thighs. Similarly, the white elephant-skin is stretched behind her back like a cloak, with its right legs draped over her shoulders, its head at her right side, its rump and tail at her left, with its left legs billowing out below. These three skins represent her triumph over ignorance (elephant-skin), desire (human-skin), and aggression (tiger-skin). She wears a golden tiara adorned with five jewel-topped dry white skulls, golden earrings, necklaces, bracelets, armlets and anklets; and the filigree bone ornaments of bracelets, armlets and anklets, little bone loops that hang from her crown, a bone belt, and an elaborate bone apron with sixty-four hanging loops. A long writhing green-black serpent encircles her chest as a sacred-thread, and around her neck she wears a garland of fifty blood-dripping heads that are strung together on a thread of human intestines. These fifty freshly severed heads represent the purification of speech as the mantra-rosary of the fifty Sanskrit vowels and consonants.
ย ย
With her right hand she wields aloft theย Vajra-handled curved knife of theย Dakinis, which she circles towards the ten directions to terrify allย marasย or obstructive demons. This sharp knife severs the dualistic distinction between subject and object, and represents her ability to sever the three poisons of ignorance, attachment, and aversion. With her left hand she holds a skull-cup full of blood in front of her heart, with strands of hair hanging from the base of the skull. The bloodย swirls in an anticlockwise direction to indicate her performance of the left-hand practices of the mother-tantra' traditions. While the blood-filled skull-cup symbolizes the cultivation of great bliss, and her ability to consume the blood of misperception. Resting in the crook of her left arm is the long white eight-sided shaft of her tantric staff orย Khatvanga, which represents the essence of Heruka, and her ability to perform all kinds of method activities or skillful means. The top of herย Khatvangaย is adorned with the symbolic attributes of a golden Crossed-Vajraย (Skt.ย Vishvavajra); a golden nectar vase; a billowing white silk ribbon; a fresh red head; a decaying green head; a dry white skull, and the crowning symbol of a blazing iron trident. A blazing mass of awareness fire emanates from her body, and behind these orange-red flames appear the radiating golden light rays of her aura.
Expertly cast from copper alloy using the lost wax method, gilded with gold plated and hand-painted face; this sculpture is a profoundly wrathful representation of Troma Nagmo Yogini. The Troma Nagmo Yogini's features have been lovingly carved, imbuing the piece with a magical sense of warmth and compassion. This sculpture was individually handcrafted in Patan, Nepal by master artisans of the Shakya clan who are considered among the best in the world. These craftsmen are the modern heirs to a centuries-old tradition of creating sacred art for use in temples and monasteries. The fine metalworking techniques have been passed down from generation to generation since ancient times
No customer comments for the moment.