Figure
Item number Ef193 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
Item number Ef193 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
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Clay model of human figure. Torso is pinched at waist and lower extremities form a wide skirt that is pained yellow, red, green and white. Arms are stumpy and roughly depicted. Hands and face painted black. Wears plain silver crown. Back is unpainted.
These figures were made by Bengali potters for sale as ritual objects at Shelda Market in Calcutta during the Bengali equivalent of the Ratha Yatra festival. After the festival their function doubles as toys for children. Made by Bengali Kumbhakara caste (Kumara).
Figure depicts Jagannath, lord of the world, a form of Krishna. In Bengal and Orissa, it often replaces Buddha as the ninth incarnation of Vishnu.
Local mythology explains that the carpenter and architect of the gods, Viswa Karma, was interrupted while making the original temple image and refused to complete it, leaving it in an unfinished crude form.
This data has been provided to the RRN by the MOA: University of British Columbia. We've used it to provide the information on the Data tab.
Figure depicts Jagannath, lord of the world, a form of Krishna. In Bengal and Orissa, it often replaces Buddha as the ninth incarnation of Vishnu.
These figures were made by Bengali potters for sale as ritual objects at Shelda Market in Calcutta during the Bengali equivalent of the Ratha Yatra festival. After the festival their function doubles as toys for children. Made by Bengali Kumbhakara caste (Kumara).
Local mythology explains that the carpenter and architect of the gods, Viswa Karma, was interrupted while making the original temple image and refused to complete it, leaving it in an unfinished crude form.
Clay model of human figure. Torso is pinched at waist and lower extremities form a wide skirt that is pained yellow, red, green and white. Arms are stumpy and roughly depicted. Hands and face painted black. Wears plain silver crown. Back is unpainted.
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