Mask of Shiva

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Mask of Shiva

India, Maharashtra or Karnataka, 18th century
Jewelry and Adornments; masks
Silver, repoussé and chased
9 7/8 x 6 7/8 x 2 1/2 in. (25.08 x 17.46 x 6.35 cm)
Purchased with funds provided by Harry and Yvonne Lenart (AC1995.16.1)
Not currently on public view

Curator Notes

This mask of the Hindu god Shiva would have likely been used as an ornate visage for an image of the deity while in worship in a temple or domestic shrine (for comparison, see M.75.4.2), as a processi...
This mask of the Hindu god Shiva would have likely been used as an ornate visage for an image of the deity while in worship in a temple or domestic shrine (for comparison, see M.75.4.2), as a processional image (for comparison, see M.76.147.1), or as the divine face of Shiva gracing a Shivalinga (for comparison, see AC1995.220.1). A stylistically related silver mask of the goddess Devi is in the Sri Mangalamba Temple, Mangalore, Karnataka. Shiva wears a tall crown with several registers of foliate or geometric motifs, which is surmounted by a lotus flower with splayed foliage. His large almond-shaped eyes are wide open in a physiognomic style favored in southern India, such as found in the narrative paintings from Paithan, Maharashtra (for example, see M.86.345.15). He has thick eyebrows, a twirled moustache, and a stubbly beard. Mustachioed Shivalingas have a long history of representation (for a late 4th-century example from Mathura, see M.2010.131; for a 17th-century Maharashtrian example, see M.84.228.4). The presence of a beard is uncommon for Shiva, but is featured on two of his iconographic forms, Bhairava (see M.82.220 and M.87.279.5) and the mountaineer hunter (kirata) in the 6th-century poem by Bharavi, the Kirata-Arjuniya, which was popularized by the paintings of Raja Ravi Varma (1848–1906). Shiva’s third eye is depicted on his forehead in its customary shape of a vertical ellipsoid or lozenge, but is here adorned with a floral motif.
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