Mythical Aquatic Creature (Makara)

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Mythical Aquatic Creature (Makara)

Indonesia, Eastern Java, 13th-14th century
Sculpture
Earthenware
24 1/2 x 7 1/2 x 14 1/2 in. (62 x 19 x 36.6 cm)
Gift of Paul F. Walter (M.86.345.17)
Not currently on public view

Curator Notes

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A makara (sea monster) is a mythical aquatic creature symbolic of fecundity that is a varying composite of diverse animals. The most common hybrid form, as represented in a Nepalese repoussé gilt copper alloy sculpture (M.85.279.6), has the trunk and head of an elephant, the body and feet of a crocodile, and the foliated tail of a fish or peacock. This Eastern Javanese earthenware makara has the trunk of an elephant, the head and jaws of a crocodile, and the scales and flexible body of a fish. In place of a tail, this hollow makara has what was probably a vessel or lid but is now fragmentary. The surviving elements include a floral medallion and a handle with a serpent head junction. Makaras have an extremely rich heritage in Southern Asian and Himalayan art and culture. A makara is identified as the mount (vahana) of the god Varuna in the Vedic (proto-Hindu) scriptures of the second millennium BCE (see M.72.4.2). Architectural makaras survive in India from at least as early as the second century BCE. Makara forms are used in architecture for waterspouts, and as structural and design components of archways (torana) (see M.79.34a-b, M.91.350.3, and AC1999.127.20) and thronebacks (see M.81.90.5 and M.2001.1). They are ubiquitous in the ritual and decorative arts, particularly as ornate terminals on sacramental implements such as thunderbolts (vajra or dorje; see M.81.4, AC1994.176.1, M.2001.158.1); jewelry, especially earrings and necklaces (see M.83.105.1); and weaponry (see M.79.243.1, M.79.243.3, and AC1997.276.1). This distinctive form of a makara with a sharply upturned snout was possibly associated with ancestral worship. In a perhaps parallel expression found in Nepal, it may have been intended as a dry spout (without a natural water source) facing upwards towards the sky. Offerings of water are sometimes made to these specific spouts in Nepal, particularly by a son for his deceased parents, to quench their thirst in the afterlife. In Newari, they are known as Thaswo Hiti. See Deepak Shimkhada, "Tusha Hiti: The Origin and Significance of the Name," Monsoon: South Asian Studies Association Journal 1:1 (2022): 23-43. (https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/monsoon-sasa-journal/vol1/iss1/2)
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Bibliography

  • Pal, Pratapaditya. Icons of Piety, Images of Whimsy: Asian Terra-cottas from the Walter Grounds Collection. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1987.