
Cleveland Museum of Art
Text, Folio 51 (verso), from a Kalpa-sutra
- Date
- c. 1475–1500
- Medium
- Gum tempera, ink, and gold on paper
- Culture
- Western India, Gujarat
- Department
- Indian and Southeast Asian Art
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Nemi, who was the cousin of the Hindu god Krishna, lived in the ancient mythic past. Like every other Jina, after achieving enlightenment he gave a mystical teaching to all the gods and animals and appeared to the assembly simultaneously in all directions. This exposition of Jain teachings is depicted by the circular diagram with Nemi seated in the center. The crescent moon under the seated figure of Nemi at the top of the page reveals that he is depicted in the realm of liberation, above the world of birth and death, in eternal meditative bliss.
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.

Nemi's Omniscience and First Teaching (below) and Nemi in the Realm of Liberation (above), Folio 51 (recto), from a Kalpa-sutra
Cleveland Museum of Art

Nemi Enthroned, Folio 54 (verso), from a Kalpa-sutra
Cleveland Museum of Art

Text, Folio 54 (recto), from a Kalpa-sutra
Cleveland Museum of Art

Birth of Nemi, Folio 48 (verso), from a Kalpa-sutra
Cleveland Museum of Art

Text, Folio 57 (recto), from a Kalpa-sutra
Cleveland Museum of Art

The Lion's Cave with Sthulabhadra and His Sisters, Folio 60 (verso), from a Kalpa-sutra
Cleveland Museum of Art

Folio 22 from a Yoga-shastra of Hemachandra: Jain Monk with disciple and two laymen, two Nuns, and a laywoman (recto); Text (verso)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Text, Folio 25 (recto), from a Kalpa-sutra
Cleveland Museum of Art

Text, folio 12 (verso), from a Kalpa-sutra
Cleveland Museum of Art

Text, Folio 31 (verso), from a Kalpa-sutra
Cleveland Museum of Art

Text, folio 5 (verso), from Brahman Rishabhadatta's speech, from a Kalpa-sutra
Cleveland Museum of Art

Seated Jina Rishabha Enshrined, from a Jain Manuscript: Kalpa-Sutra
Cleveland Museum of Art