The Indian Buddhist Iconography

by Benoytosh Bhattachacharyya | 1958 | 51,392 words | ISBN-10: 8173053138 | ISBN-13: 9788173053139

This page contains an iconography image of 108 forms of Avalokiteshvara (37): Karandavyuha Lokeshvara and represents of the book Indian Buddhist Iconography, based on extracts of the Sadhanamala English translation. These plates and illustrations represent either photographs of sculptures or line-drawing reproductions of paintings or other representations of Buddhist artwork.

108 forms of Avalokiteśvara (37): Kāraṇḍavyūha Lokeśvara

Karandavyuha Lokeshvara
Fig. 37A: Kāraṇḍavyūha Lokeśvara

This is figure 37 in a series of 108 forms of Avalokiteśvara from the Macchandar Vahal, Kathmandu, Nepal.

37. Kāraṇḍavyūha Lokeśvara. He is one-faced and two-armed and sits in the Vajraparyaṅka attitude on a lotus. He holds the Vajra in his right hand and the book against his chest in the left.

The Bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara (The Watchful Lord) also called Padmapāṇi (Lotus bearer) is the spiritual son of the Dhyāni Buddha Amitābha. He is one of the most popular Bodhisattvas of the Buddhist Pantheon having as many as 108 different forms [viz., Kāraṇḍavyūha Lokeśvara].

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