
Cleveland Museum of Art
Kali attacking Nisumbha
- Date
- c. 1740
- Medium
- Gum tempera and gold on paper
- Culture
- Northern India, Pahari kingdoms
- Department
- Indian and Southeast Asian Art
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
The powerful black Hindu goddess Kali effortlessly slays an eight-armed spotted green demon with an impossibly long trident. His chariot horses and two minions lie incapacitated below. Kali’s tongue lolls out, indicating her ability to catch blood before it touches the ground: one of her demonic enemies has blood that generates another demon every time one drop comes in contact with the earth. The demon is a metaphor for wicked thoughts that give rise to more evil thoughts; Kali aids her followers in eradicating them all.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.

Kali
Cleveland Museum of Art

Leaf from a Kalighat album: The Goddess Kali (recto); Kali Standing on Shiva (verso)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Kali on Shiva, from a Tantric Devi Series
Cleveland Museum of Art

Kali Trampling Upon Shiva
Minneapolis Institute of Art

The Goddess Kali (recto), from a Kalighat album
Cleveland Museum of Art

Kali Standing on Shiva (verso), from a Kalighat album
Cleveland Museum of Art

The Goddess Annihilates the Demon Raktabija, from a Devi-Mahatmya
Cleveland Museum of Art

Leaf from a Kalighat album: Krishna as Kali worshipped by Radha (recto); Krishna quells the serpent Kaliya (verso)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Durga Killing the Buffalo Demon
Rijksmuseum

Goddess standing on a mountaintop
Cleveland Museum of Art
One of a Pair of Manuscript Covers from the Glorification of the Great Goddess (Devimahatmya)
Art Institute of Chicago
One of a Pair of Manuscript Covers from the Glorification of the Great Goddess (Devimahatmya)
Art Institute of Chicago