Hevajra - New York City, NY
Posted by: Metro2
N 40° 46.762 W 073° 57.762
18T E 587529 N 4514782
This sculpture is located at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Waymark Code: WMN72F
Location: New York, United States
Date Posted: 01/08/2015
Views: 4
The Museum's website for this piece (
visit link) provides the following information:
"Bust of Hevajra
Period: Angkor period
Date: late 12th–early 13th century
Culture: Cambodia
Medium: Stone
Dimensions: H. 52 in. (132.1 cm); W. 29 in. (73.7 cm)
Classification: Sculpture
Credit Line: Fletcher Fund, 1936
Accession Number: 36.96.4
On view in Gallery 249
This colossal bust of the Esoteric Buddhist god Hevajra comes from the ruins of the ancient site of Angkor in northwestern Cambodia. It is said to have been found near the East Gate (the Gate of the Dead) of the great walled city of Angkor Thom, built by Jayavarman VII (r. 1181–1219). The Bayon, sited at the very center of Angkor Thom, was one of the last major monuments of the Khmer empire.
This sculpture is fragmentary. The top head is missing. If the sculpture was, in fact, intended to represent the dancing Hevajra, it would have had eight arms on each side. Quite a few small bronze sculptures confirm this depiction. To judge from the rough surface of parts of this sculpture, it was never completed."
Read more about the god at (
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