There are many forms of Vajravarahi according to attributes she carries in her hands. The first form of Vajravarahi is invoked in those rituals that are performed with the specific purpose of bewitching men and women. She is very popular in Tibet, Nepal and in many Northern Buddhist countries.
She dances in ardhaparyanka on a corpse on a lotus flower. Her expression is ecstatic and wrathful, three eyes are angry and staring. Her mouth is open, showing her teeth, and beard fangs. She wears a crown of skulls with snakes. Her golden hair is upswept in loose. Moreover she is wearing elephant hide and human skin as upper garments; a tiger skin as a lower garment, necklace if serpent, gold earrings, necklace, anklets, waistband, a long garland of severed human heads, and bon ornaments. There is wisdom fire aureole behind her.
Her upraised right hand is holding a vajra-marked chopper, and the left hand near the breast, a cranium. There is vajra-marked khatvanga staff, symbolizing her non-dual union with Chakrasamvara. The ritual staff also signifies that the entire retinue of the sixty-two-Deity Chakrasamvara/Vajravarahi mandala accompanies her. The lower middle ground and foreground are beautifully rendered with high peaks, covered with snow, waterfall, lakes and rocks etc. The bottom center and corners depict auspicious offerings. The black background is filled with clouds. The figure is brilliantly drawn. The thangka is suitable for esoteric sadhana and practices.
Select Bibliography
A. Getty, The Gods of Northern Buddhism, Tokyo, 1962
B. Bhattacharyya, The Indian Buddhist Iconography,Calcutta, 1968
J.C. Huntington and D. Bangdel, The Circle of Bliss: Buddhist Meditational Art, Ohio, 2004
Marylin M. Rhie & Robert A.F. Thurman, Worlds of Transformation: Tibetan Art of Wisdom and Compassion, New York, 1999
Marylin M. Rhie & Robert A.F. Thurman, Wisdom and Compassion: The Sacred Art of Tibet, Thames and Hudson, 1996
R. Linrothe & J. Watt, Demonic Divine: Himalayan Art and Beyond, New York, 2005
This description is by Dr. Shailendra K. Verma, whose Doctorate thesis is on "Emergence and Evolution of the Buddha Image (From its inception to 8th century A.D.)".
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