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Fine Quality Copper Alloy with Beautifully Hand Painted Vajrakilaya Statue
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761768127353
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Name |
Vajrakilaya Statue |
Height |
6โ with frame |
5.5โ without frame |
|
Width |
4.5โ |
Depth |
2.25โ |
Material |
Lost Wax Method, Copper Alloy with Beautifully Hand Painted |
Actual Weight |
0.774 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. |
Vajrakilaya, also called Vajrakila and Dorje Phurba, is a wrathful Tantric meditation deity whose practices are most often performed by disciples of the Nyingma order. Vajrakilaya's practices are particularly effective methods for removing obstacles and obstructions, and for destroying and purifying negative forces. Vajrakilaya embodies the powerful enlightened activity of all the Buddhas, and his special emblem - the ritual Phurba dagger - represents the sharp point of wisdom fixed immobile on emptiness through the power of single-pointed concentration.
When the great Guru Padmasambhava first arrived in Tibet, the first transmission that he gave to his twenty-five "heart disciples" was the practices of the Vajrakilaya Tantra. Padmasambhava gave these teachings in order to eliminate obstructions to the propagation of Buddhadharma in Tibet.
Vajrakilaya has three heads, six arms, and four legs. His two main hands embrace his consort Khorlo Gyedunma, and hold the magic Phurba dagger. The lower blade of his Phurba represents method or skillful means, and its upper handle represents wisdom. The triple-edged nature of the blade symbolizes the severance of the three root delusions of hatred, ignorance, and desirous attachment, and its triangular single-pointed shape symbolizes the realization of emptiness. Vajrakilaya's other right hands hold five- and nine-pronged Vajras, representing his power and indestructibility. His other left hands hold a flaming triple wish-fulfilling jewel, and a trident which symbolizes his abandonment of the imprints of the delusions of the three realms.
He wears an elephant skin across his back, showing that he has abandoned the ignorance of self-grasping. A human skin is hung diagonally across the front of his body, indicating his conquest of the self-cherishing ego. His loin cloth is made of tiger skin, symbolizing his abandonment of hatred, and he wears a long necklace of freshly severed human heads, representing his abandonment of ordinary appearances and conceptions.
Vajrakilaya's consort, whom he holds in a passionate embrace, complements his masculine skillful methods with her feminine wisdom. They each wear crowns adorned with five human skulls, indicating their purification of the five aggregates. Khorlo Gyedunma holds a skull cup brimming with the blood of the four maras, symbolizing her experience of the clear light of bliss, and her victory over uncontrolled death. They stand together in the warrior's pose, with one leg bent and the other extended, surrounded by the blazing fire of exalted wisdom that annihilates all delusions and consumes neurotic states.
Meticulously cast from copper alloy through the intricate lost wax method and adorned with exquisite hand painting, this sculpture embodies the profound wrathful essence of Vajrakilaya with his consort. The statue, finely hand-carved, achieves a captivating richness, heightened by the beautiful and sensuous touch of the artisan's hand-painted details. 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.
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