Colossal Head of a Deva

Cleveland Museum of Art

Colossal Head of a Deva

Date
c. 1200
Medium
sandstone
Culture
Cambodia, Angkor, Preah Khan
Department
Indian and Southeast Asian Art
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

This head is from one of the gods ( devas in Sanskrit) who, according to Hindu myth, churned the primordial Ocean of Milk to extract the nectar of immortality. Using a mountain as a churning rod and a serpent as the rope, the gods on one side and the demons on the other vied to win the nectar. The gods prevailed and achieved immortality. The deity’s conical tiara consists of a diadem with floral decoration and is topped by a five-tiered lotus narrowing upward.

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