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Work 757 of 1,149
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This information may change as the result of ongoing research.
* This information may change as the result of ongoing research.
Paramasukha-Chakrasamvara Mandala
Nepal
ca. 1100
Distemper on cloth
26 7/8 x 50 1/2 in. (68.3 x 128.3 cm)
Painting
Rogers Fund, 1995
1995.233
This is the earliest known Nepalese painting on cloth (paubha). Its rich palette dominated by red and yellow, and the elongated proportions and animation of the figures are characteristic of contemporaneous illustrated manuscripts. The figures' rounded faces are typical of early Nepali works. The placement of the eight graveyards (standard in the iconography of the wrathful deities) along the outer edges of the painting and the attention to detail and humor in these scenes are also characteristic of contemporaneous Nepalese manuscript paintings. The careful treatment of details throughout the painting—the jewelry worn by Chakrasamvara and his consort Vajravarahi, the delicate crossed "vajras" (ritual implements) that fill the outer edges of the central circle, the many jewels and other elements that decorate the mandala—exemplify the best of Nepali painting and foreshadow the influence of this artistic tradition in Tibet during the fourteenth through sixteenth centuries.

The central couple is surrounded by six deities, rather than the usual four or eight. There are hundreds of forms of the Chakrasamvara mandala because it is considered the chief of all Mother Tantras of the Unexcelled Yoga Tantra class. This one is remarkable for the medley of varied figures in the charnel grounds just outside the circle as well as for the variety of their movements and actions.