Jain Manuscript Painting
Category: | Jain Art |
Type: | Miniature painting |
Motif: | Standing Parshva |
Name: | Parsvanatha's Austerities |
Manuscript: | Kalpasutra manuscript folio |
Union state: | Gujarat |
Country: | India |
Date: | 1400-1500 |
Style: | Western Indian style |
Material: | Ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on paper |
Length: | 25,7 cm |
Width: | 11,1 cm |
Custody: | The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
Purchase: | Anonymous Gift, 1957 |
Inventory-No.: | 57.185.4 |
Description: | Parsvanatha, the twenty-third Jina, is shown standing in body-abandonment meditation posture (kayotsarga) in a forest, enduring a storm sent by an evil force. He receives shelter from the naga-king Dharana, who coils his snake body around the jina and provides a canopy with his seven-hooded head. This well-known story is shared with Buddhism, and we can only speculate as to which came first; certainly Jains claim that the antiquity of Parsvanatha antedates that of the Buddha by several centuries. Indeed, Parsvanatha is claimed to have lived in the sixth century B.C.E. and may well be the original founder of Jainism, rather than Mahavira, a near contemporary of the Buddha. |
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