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"US$ 250 - 300" (Results found 173) |
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22.5 x 17 Green Tara Thanka Painting |
US$ 267.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 22.5 x 17 Green Tara Tibetan Thanka Religious Scroll Painting. |
Green Tara THE PROTECTRESS
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Green Tara is regarded as spiritual consort of Amoghasiddhi, the Dhyani Buddha. Green Tara is portrayed similar to that of the White Tara. One can find the difference only in her left hand which holds a half closed lotus or water lily flower with long petals which is often blue. In the Lamaeist Tradition, Tara is incarnated in all good women. Green Tara is also to have mortal base in historic persons of the Nepali and Chinese princess who married the great king Srong Tsong Gampo and credited with the introduction of Buddhism to Tibet and China. Green Tara vowed "until Samsara is empty, I shall work for benefit of sentient beings in a woman's body". Green Tara is worshipped, because she brings all good women.
Green Tara is seated on a lotus rising out of a lake. Dressed in fine silk and rainbow colored stockings, Green Tara holds in each hand a blue Utpala flower. Green Tara sits in Lalita asana (sitting position) with her right leg extended ready to assist those who ask her help. |
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21 x 17 Green Tara Thanka Painting |
US$ 300.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 21 x 17 Green Tara Tibetan Thanka Religious Scroll Painting. |
Green Tara THE PROTECTRESS
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Green Tara is regarded as spiritual consort of Amoghasiddhi, the Dhyani Buddha. Green Tara is portrayed similar to that of the White Tara. One can find the difference only in her left hand which holds a half closed lotus or water lily flower with long petals which is often blue. In the Lamaeist Tradition, Tara is incarnated in all good women. Green Tara is also to have mortal base in historic persons of the Nepali and Chinese princess who married the great king Srong Tsong Gampo and credited with the introduction of Buddhism to Tibet and China. Green Tara vowed "until Samsara is empty, I shall work for benefit of sentient beings in a woman's body". Green Tara is worshipped, because she brings all good women.
Green Tara is seated on a lotus rising out of a lake. Dressed in fine silk and rainbow colored stockings, Green Tara holds in each hand a blue Utpala flower. Green Tara sits in Lalita asana (sitting position) with her right leg extended ready to assist those who ask her help. |
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23 x 18 Green Tara Thanka Painting |
US$ 267.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 23 x 18 Green Tara Tibetan Thanka Religious Scroll Painting. |
Green Tara THE PROTECTRESS
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Green Tara is regarded as spiritual consort of Amoghasiddhi, the Dhyani Buddha. Green Tara is portrayed similar to that of the White Tara. One can find the difference only in her left hand which holds a half closed lotus or water lily flower with long petals which is often blue. In the Lamaeist Tradition, Tara is incarnated in all good women. Green Tara is also to have mortal base in historic persons of the Nepali and Chinese princess who married the great king Srong Tsong Gampo and credited with the introduction of Buddhism to Tibet and China. Green Tara vowed "until Samsara is empty, I shall work for benefit of sentient beings in a woman's body". Green Tara is worshipped, because she brings all good women.
Green Tara is seated on a lotus rising out of a lake. Dressed in fine silk and rainbow colored stockings, Green Tara holds in each hand a blue Utpala flower. Green Tara sits in Lalita asana (sitting position) with her right leg extended ready to assist those who ask her help. |
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23 x 17.5 Medicine Buddha Thangka Painting |
US$ 267.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 23 x 17.5 Medicine Buddha Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting is painted by the experienced artisans who have been devoted in the business from generations. |
Medicine Buddha The Healing Buddha
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Medicine Buddha also known as Bhaishajyaguru. The Medicine Buddha is believed to be a transformation of Shakyamuni Buddha, who manifested himself as the Medicine Buddha in order to give the medicine teaching to the fourfold assembly of Hindu Gods, Sages, Bodhisattvas, Arhats and Adepts etc. On the other hand it is also said that Medicine Buddha had attained perfect enlightenment many eons previously. Medicine Buddha also Bhaishajyaguru vowed that his Buddha verse would be a world of healing, and that throughout Buddha verse, wherever beings suffer from sickness and injury, Medicine Buddha would eternally manifest to bring them his healing knowledge.
This beautiful 23 x 17.5 Medicine Buddha Tibetan Thangka Painting has his left hand, lying in his lap in Meditation Mudra, which holds a bowl containing medicine nuts, while his right hand is in Charity Mudra which holds the branch of the Myrobalan plant, a medicinal plant found in Nepal, India and other tropical countries. Medicine Buddha wears the monastic robe and is seated with the legs crossed. Medicine Buddha sits on a moon disk on lotus petals. |
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23 x 17.5 Manjushri Scroll Thangka Painting |
US$ 267.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 23 x 17.5 Manjushri Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting is painted by the experienced artisans who have been devoted in the business from generations. |
Manjushri Bodhisattva of Wisdom
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Manjushri is known as the Bodhisattva of Wisdom and is the bodhisattva counterpart to Adi Buddha (Thogmai Sangye), the Primordial Buddha. Manjushri is the tutelary deity of astrology and generally the protector of students. Manjushri is often considered to be the Buddha's incarnate wisdom. In his right hand Manjushri holds the flaming double sword of analytic discrimination to annihilate ignorance, the fundamental cause of cyclic existence and suffering. The left hand holds a blue lotus surmounted by the book of transcendent wisdom, the Prajnaparamita sutra. Manjushri is surrounded by over a hundred similar golden manifestations, symbolizing the universality of the Bodhisattva of Wisdom. Manjushri, whose worship confers mastery of the Dharma and he is considered the founder of Kathmandu. Originally, the Kathmandu valley was a lake where Vipaswi Buddha threw some lotus seeds. One of these seeds grew into a thousand petalled lotus flower from which shone a five colored light representing the five Buddhas. With his flaming sword of wisdom, Manjushri cut through the valley walls and the light came to rest on the peak at Swayambhu. |
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23 x 18.3 Manjushri Scroll Thangka Painting |
US$ 283.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 23 x 18.3 Manjushri Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting is painted by the experienced artisans who have been devoted in the business from generations. |
Manjushri Bodhisattva of Wisdom
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Manjushri is known as the Bodhisattva of Wisdom and is the bodhisattva counterpart to Adi Buddha (Thogmai Sangye), the Primordial Buddha. Manjushri is the tutelary deity of astrology and generally the protector of students. Manjushri is often considered to be the Buddha's incarnate wisdom. In his right hand Manjushri holds the flaming double sword of analytic discrimination to annihilate ignorance, the fundamental cause of cyclic existence and suffering. The left hand holds a blue lotus surmounted by the book of transcendent wisdom, the Prajnaparamita sutra. Manjushri is surrounded by over a hundred similar golden manifestations, symbolizing the universality of the Bodhisattva of Wisdom. Manjushri, whose worship confers mastery of the Dharma and he is considered the founder of Kathmandu. Originally, the Kathmandu valley was a lake where Vipaswi Buddha threw some lotus seeds. One of these seeds grew into a thousand petalled lotus flower from which shone a five colored light representing the five Buddhas. With his flaming sword of wisdom, Manjushri cut through the valley walls and the light came to rest on the peak at Swayambhu. |
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20 x 15.2 Manjushri Scroll Thangka Painting |
US$ 267.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 20 x 15.2 Manjushri Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting is painted by the experienced artisans who have been devoted in the business from generations. |
Manjushri Bodhisattva of Wisdom
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Manjushri is known as the Bodhisattva of Wisdom and is the bodhisattva counterpart to Adi Buddha (Thogmai Sangye), the Primordial Buddha. Manjushri is the tutelary deity of astrology and generally the protector of students. Manjushri is often considered to be the Buddha's incarnate wisdom. In his right hand Manjushri holds the flaming double sword of analytic discrimination to annihilate ignorance, the fundamental cause of cyclic existence and suffering. The left hand holds a blue lotus surmounted by the book of transcendent wisdom, the Prajnaparamita sutra. Manjushri is surrounded by over a hundred similar golden manifestations, symbolizing the universality of the Bodhisattva of Wisdom. Manjushri, whose worship confers mastery of the Dharma and he is considered the founder of Kathmandu. Originally, the Kathmandu valley was a lake where Vipaswi Buddha threw some lotus seeds. One of these seeds grew into a thousand petalled lotus flower from which shone a five colored light representing the five Buddhas. With his flaming sword of wisdom, Manjushri cut through the valley walls and the light came to rest on the peak at Swayambhu. |
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22.5 x 16.5 White Tara Scroll Thangka Painting |
US$ 267.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 22.5 x 16.5 White Tara Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting is painted by the experienced artisans who have been devoted in the business from generations. |
White Tara The Divine Mother
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Goddess White Tara is also called Sapta Lochani (Sapta means Seven and Lochani means Eye) because she has seven eyes. The Goddess White Tara is the female personification of compassion. Born of a tear from the eye of Avalokiteshwara, literally her name means "saviors". White Tara represents the enlightened and liberating activity of all the Buddhas. White Tara embodies the motherly aspect of universal compassion. Her compassion for living beings and her desire to save them from suffering is said to be even stronger than a mother's love for her children. White Tara, the Mother of all Buddhas, is known for her swiftness in responding to the prayers of those who invoke her name. White Tara meditation practice is said to grant health, long life, fearlessness, patience, and peace.
In this 22.5 x 16.5 White Tara Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting, White Tara is seated gracefully on a lotus base in the Lalitasana posture. Her right hand is open towards us in the gesture of supreme generosity, signifying her ability to fulfill our spiritual and material needs. Her left hand is in the gesture of bestowing blessing, refuge, and protection. White Tara is clad in brocade, naked from the waist up, saves for the profusion of jewelry and crowned by a tiara. Her rounded face is surmounted by a mass of tubular hair. White Tara holds a lotus in her left hand and displays the gesture of charity with the right. The third eye on her forehead and four additional eyes, two each on her palms and soles, symbolize her omniscience. |
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20.9 x 15.5 Buddha Mandala Thangka Painting |
US$ 267.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 20.9 x 15.5 Buddha Mandala Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting is painted with Gold by the experienced artisans who have been devoted in the business from generations. |
Buddha Mandala
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Mandala is a circle which is a device for the Tantric meditation. It is a visual aid for concentration and introversive meditation leading to the attainment of insights and to activation of forces culminating in "Siddhi" supernatural forces. The Mandala is the graphic representation of this process. It is not only theoretical but practical also as an operational scheme involving a clear plan for practical realization of the process within oneself. It thus becomes an instrument (Yantra). There are many types and varieties of Mandalas depending on the nature of the central deity. The most classic pattern of Mandalas is of the Dhyani Buddha.
This Thangka depicts Buddha Mandala. The Mandala represents "palace of purity" a magic sphere cleared of spiritual obstacles and unpurified. The square of the "Sacred palace" proper is end used in multiple circles of flame, Vajra, eight centuries (appears only in wrathful deities) lotus, then the inner square to reach to the deity of the Mandala. |
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20 x 16 Wheel of Life Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting |
US$ 267.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 20 x 16 Wheel of Life Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting is painted by the experienced artisans who have been devoted in the business from generations. |
Wheel of Life
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Commonly referred to as the "Wheel of Life," this classical image from the Tibetan Buddhist tradition depicts the psychological states, or realms of existence, associated with the unenlightened state. A powerful mirror for spiritual aspirants, the wheel of deluded existence is often painted to the left of Tibetan monastery doors; it offers an opportunity for monks and pilgrims alike to look deeply into their essential being. At the center of the Mandala, the intertwined images of a pig, a rooster, and a snake symbolically depict the ignorance, greed, and aggression that characterize the worlds of suffering and dissatisfaction, which Buddhist call Samsara. Surrounding the central figures are five concentric rings of attendant deities or, in the case of these Thangkas, their symbolic equivalents. The first circle, the circle of Great Bliss, consists of four goddesses in the four cardinal directions. At the intermediate points of the compass are four skull cups supported by vases and containing seminal essences, blood, five ambrosial nectars, and the "five awakening." The second circle is the Circle of Mind (Chittachakra); the third is the Circle of Speech (Vakrachakra); the fourth, the Circle of the Body (Kayachakra); and the fifth, the Circle of Tantric Vows (Samayachakra). In the second two versions, these circles are represented by stylized lotus petals radiating from the central image. Each of the Mandalas is inscribed by a decorative frieze of mythical animals and floral motifs, an element introduced into Buddhist painting in the mid twentieth century by Newar artists of the Kathmandu valley. As a support for inner transformation, Chakrasamvara's blissful radiance converts timid responses to reality into radical engagement. When desire no longer clings to its object, it awakens to its primordial nature, which no longer divides into self and other. This blissful awareness encompasses all life and emotions, combusting in the liberating vision of selfless ecstasy. On the outer ring of the first Mandala are the eight charnel grounds that confront Tantric practitioners with a realm beyond hopes, desires, preferences, and fears. The charnel grounds signify the transformative energies of Tantra itself, the seamless continuity of life and death. Ignorance of our true nature is transformed in the charnel grounds into fearless and radiant awareness, the corpse of our mundane self consumed by jackals and flames. Without an acceptance of death and transfiguration, our aspirations to wholeness, to Buddhahood, can never bear fruit. All Creation Begins with the sacred union of male and female energies. To experience the pure creative passion between man and woman, to know unconditional love, is to manifest the body, mind, and spirit of a Buddha. |
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