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SOUTH ASIAN OBJECTS FROM THE COLLECTION
INDIA
Sculpture from the Kushan Period
Sculpture from North India, 5th-7th Centuries
Jain sculpture
Sculpture of the Pala Period
Stone Sculpture from Hindu Temples
Sculptures from South India, 8th-9th Centuries
Bronze Sculpture of the Chola Period
Art for the Mughal and Rajput Courts
Hindu Temple Hangings
Buddhist Painting from India, Nepal, and Tibet
NEPAL
Buddhist Painting from India, Nepal, and Tibet
Sculpture from Nepal
PAKISTAN
Sculpture from the Kushan Period
SRI LANKA
Two Bodhisattvas from Sri Lanka
Saint Sambandar
India, Tamil Nadu; Chola period (880-1279), 12th century
Copper alloy
H. 18 7/8 in. (47.9 cm)
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller 3rd Collection of Asian Art
1979.024
Sambandar, who lived in the 7th century, is one of a group of sixty-three Hindu saints who dedicated their lives to the worship of Shiva. He can be identified by his youthful appearance (he lived only eighteen years), by his joyful dancing pose (which refers to his emphasis on song and dance in the worship of Shiva), and by the pointing finger of his right hand. According to legend, the three-year-old Sambandar became hungry while visiting a temple with his father, who left him alone to take a ritual dip in the temple's tank. When the father returned and questioned the child about the source of the milk he was drinking, Sambandar pointed at a sculpture of Shiva and Parvati. After having drunk this divine milk, Sambandar composed more than three hundred hymns, which form the beginning of the Tamil Shaivite canon, the Tirumai (Sacred Way). Sambandar's hymns are still sung in temples throughout southern India. Both this sculpture and another in the Asia Society Collection, Saint Mannikkavachaka (see Related Objects), are reputed to have been excavated from the Tiruvan Vanpanalur Temple, built during the Chola period, and their similar sizes and stylistic similarities -- seen, for example, in the shapes of straight noses and the full lips -- suggest that they may have been made at the same atelier.
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