Vrashbharudha
Shiva, or Uma Maheshwar
This
magnificent painting in light tones of water colors portrays Shiva
and Parvati on their Nandi along with two of his devotee ganas,
Bhringi and Tumbru. They are on an errand to Mount Kailash. Shiva
journeying from and to Kailash is the theme of many of his legends,
paintings and folk traditions. Scripturally Mount Kailash is considered
Shiva's permanent abode which he is believed to leave, and that
too temporarily, only when called by his devotees for redeeming
them from their miseries or the earth from wrongs.
This
form of Shiva is usually known as Vrashbharudha Shiva or as Uma-Maheshwar.
This iconography of Shiva does not have Ganesha and Kartikeya.
Nandi who represents by its white, purity , justice and eternal
joy is, more than a vehicle, Lord Shiva's constant companion on
all his errands. The companionship of Shiva and Nandi is the earliest
known phenomenon in Hindu pantheon. Of all Aryan, or Brahmanical
deities, Shiva alone is known to have an origin receding back to
Indus days. In excavations of Indus sites it is Shiva alone whose
images in Mahayogi and Pashupati, or the herds keeper form have
so far made their appearance. Another significant image is that
of the ox, widely known as Indus bull. Obviously the dairy based
Indus culture worshipped as its principal deity a Shiva type god,
the keeper of herds, and the one who used a bull as his vehicle.
Later Nandi itself acquired the status of an independent deity and
there are in the country several temples devoted independently to
him. In all cases a Nandi image installed outside the gate of the
garbhagraha or the sanctum facing Shiva is an essential feature
of a Shiva temple.
Shiva with all his traditional attributes is in his absolute deity
form. He holds in one of his hands his usual trident. From his hair
bursts the river Ganges and a crescent moon adorns it. He is clad
in deerskin and has around his neck a snake. His conch is carried
by Bhringi and the damaru by Tumbru, which completes the list of
his attributes. Parvati, the daughter of Mount Himalaya, has on
her person garlands of white flowers, exactly in tune with the Himalayan
landscape. Sharp features, great emotionality , highly expressive
eyes and fine proportions define the figures of Shiva, Parvati,
Bhringi and Tumbru and that of Nandi. The snowy effect of the landscape
is simply unique and soothes the eyes.
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