English

Standing Buddha Offering Protection

late 5th century
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 236
This Buddha image embodies the qualities of radiant inner calm and stillness, the products of supreme wisdom. The figure once raised his right hand (now missing) in the characteristic abhaya-mudra, a gesture dispelling fear and imparting reassurance. The Buddha is robed in the simple, uncut cloth of a monk, and his religiosity is further conveyed by a large halo and auspicious markings (lakshanas), both natural and supernatural, denoting Buddhahood (the state of perfect enlightenment), As the summation of stylistic development in a period of Buddhist expansion, this representation became the benchmark for the Buddha image throughout Asia.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Standing Buddha Offering Protection
  • Period: Gupta period (4th–6th century)
  • Date: late 5th century
  • Culture: India (Uttar Pradesh, Mathura)
  • Medium: Red sandstone
  • Dimensions: H. 33 11/16 in. (85.5 cm); W. 16 3/4 in. (42.5 cm); D. 6 1/2 in. (16.5 cm)
  • Classification: Sculpture
  • Credit Line: Purchase, Enid A. Haupt Gift, 1979
  • Object Number: 1979.6
  • Curatorial Department: Asian Art

Audio

Cover Image for 959. Kids: Buddha

959. Kids: Buddha

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This man, sculpted in red stone, has ears hanging almost to his shoulders. They've been stretched by wearing heavy gold earrings. This man was Prince Siddhartha Gautama, who was born sometime around 600 BC. He gave up his throne and became a spiritual teacher called the Buddha, or ‘Enlightened One’.

Notice the broken piece of a large round disc behind Buddha's head. Originally, this was a halo. This sculpture was made in North India more than 1000 years after the Buddha lived on earth. Sculptors followed a set of rules for making images of the Buddha. The shapes of his face resembled beautiful forms found in nature. Here, for instance, the Buddhist tapered eyes are shaped like two fish. The pattern of folds on his garment looks like ripples in a pond. What about the curls in his hair? Do they look anything like snails? That's because in an old Buddhist legend, the Buddha once sat so long meditating that snails covered his head to protect him from the sun.

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