Linga with Face of Shiva (Ekamukhalinga)
Linga with Face of Shiva (Ekamukhalinga)
Published 2019-05-23T11:03:16+00:00
The linga, the aniconic pillar symbol emblematic of the Hindu god Shiva, symbolizes his essential generative powers. Here, the form is phallic, addorsed with Shiva’s face in a style reflecting iconographic innovations of the region as well as inherited design conventions from fifth-and sixth-century Gupta north India. The Shahi kingdom flourished in eastern Afghanistan only from the seventh to the ninth century, yet it produced a highly distinctive corpus of Hindu religious imagery. Typically sculpted in white marble, these works reflect links east, most notably to Kashmir for Shaiva imagery, and west, as seen in the flying locks of hair inspired by Sasanian royal imagery.
Date published | 23/05/2019 |
Complexity | Easy |
Title | Linga with Face of Shiva (Ekamukhalinga) |
Date | 9th Century |
Dimension | H. 22 7/16 in. (57 cm); W. 13 3/16 in. (33.5 cm) |
Accession | 1980.415 |
Period | Shahi period |
Medium | White marble |
Credit | Rogers Fund, 1980 |
Record | https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/38246 |
Artist | Unknown artist |
Place | Metropolitan Museum of Art |