
Cleveland Museum of Art
Shiva Bearing Aloft the Body of His Sati
- Date
- c. 1890
- Medium
- Gum tempera, graphite, ink, and tin on paper
- Culture
- Eastern India, Bengal, Kolkata, Kalighat
- Department
- Indian and Southeast Asian Art
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
This unusual image portrays Shiva holding aloft the corpse of his wife Sati with his trident. Sati immolated herself because of the hostility directed toward her husband Shiva by her father Daksha. The shadowy figure with blood emerging from the nose and heart is reminiscent of images of death ( mrtu pat ) found among the magic painter-minstrels ( jada patua ) of the Santal tribals of Bihar. The shadow is missing its right hand. In this connection, Shiva carried his wife until Vishnu cut the body into pieces that fell onto the earth and were made into shrines. The provocative title given to the piece when it was acquired was Shiva Bearing Aloft the Body of His Spouse Who Has Died in Childbirth . There is, however, no evidence of a myth concerning this theme, thus making this piece even more unusual.
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.

Worship of Shiva and Devi
Cleveland Museum of Art

Shiva Ardhanarisvara
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Standing Shiva Mahadeva
Cleveland Museum of Art

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

Shiva and Devi on Gajasura's hide
Cleveland Museum of Art

Shiva
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Savitri Triumphs over Yama, the God of Death
Art Institute of Chicago

Shiva as Slayer of the Elephant Demon
Cleveland Museum of Art

Funeral Pyre
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Trident with Shiva as Half-Woman (Ardhanarishvara)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Shiva as Nataraja Enshrined with Deities
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Shiva under trees
Cleveland Museum of Art