Naga-enthroned Buddha

Minneapolis Institute of Art

Naga-enthroned Buddha

Khmer artist

Date
12th-13th century
Medium
Bronze
Culture
Khmer
Department
Asian Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Siddhartha Gautama, who would become the Buddha, attained enlightenment after meditating for seven weeks under an ancient bodhi fig tree. During that time, he endured a week of drenching rain protected by the spreading hood of the naga (snake) King Mucalinda. Along with the Thai “Walking Buddha, ” this depiction of the Buddha sheltered by Mucalinda gained special meaning in Southeast Asia. The image was popular under the Khmer King Jayavarman VII (reign c. 1181–1218), who replaced the official state religion of Hinduism with Buddhism and erected a sculpture of the snake-enthroned Buddha at the site of a Hindu temple. Jayavarman VII possibly selected this moment from the Buddha’s life story because snakes, which are prominent in Khmer art, are associated with water, a resource critical for a vast kingdom dependent on a complex system of hydraulics and irrigation. Cambodia

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