Posted on: 26 October 2010

Lustration of the Infant Jina Mahavira
Detail from a Kalpasutra manuscript folio
India, Gujarat, late 14th century
Opaque watercolor on paper; 3 1/2 x 10 15/16 in. (8.9 x 27.8 cm)

This painting typifies the finest achievement of the late-fourteenth-century western Indian style. It is a masterful rendering of a popular subject, the bathing of Mahavira at birth. The jina's identity is indicated by the pair of kneeling buffalo, his cognitive symbol. The infant is seated on the lap of the presiding god Shakra (Indra), and two attendant gods (further manifestations of Shakra) hold lustration vessels aloft in anticipation of his first bath (a legend shared with early Buddhism). An innovation of this period is the introduction of fantastic rocks to indicate the celestial Mount Meru—the setting for this divine abhisheka—a mannerism absorbed from Iranian paintings of the period.

Source :
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York,
Purchase, Cynthia Hazen Polsky and Leon B. Polsky Fund, 2005 (2005.35)


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..."The jina's identity is indicated by the pair of kneeling buffalo".... actually they are quite clearly a pair of bulls. Wonder why have they been mentioned as buffalo?