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"US$ 300 - 350" (Results found 172) |
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26 x 20 White Tara Scroll Thangka Painting |
US$ 317.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 26 x 20 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 26 x 20 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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23.7 x 18.2 White Tara Scroll Thangka Painting |
US$ 333.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 23.7 x 18.2 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 23.7 x 18.2 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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23.7 x 18.2 White Tara Scroll Thangka Painting |
US$ 333.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 23.7 x 18.2 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 23.7 x 18.2 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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24.2 x 18.2 21 Tara Thangka Painting |
US$ 333.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 24.2 x 18.2 21 Tara Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting is painted by the experienced artisans who have been devoted in the business from generations. |
21 Tara
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This 21 Tara Set Thangka shows the images of 21 Different Tara in their postures. In this Thangka Painting 21 pictures of Tara are shown in their postures. All the 21 Taras including the large Green Tara in the middle of the painting are wonderfully painted with gold color which is very beautiful to look at and when the light strikes the painting, it glows wonderfully. This Thangka Painting shines beautifully in your room when light hits it. |
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24.5 x 17.7 21 Tara Thangka Painting |
US$ 333.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 24.5 x 17.7 21 Tara Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting is painted by the experienced artisans who have been devoted in the business from generations. |
21 Tara
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This 21 Tara Set Thangka shows the images of 21 Different Tara in their postures. In this Thangka Painting 21 pictures of Tara are shown in their postures. All the 21 Taras including the large Red Tara in the middle of the painting are wonderfully painted with gold color which is very beautiful to look at and when the light strikes the painting, it glows wonderfully. This Thangka Painting shines beautifully in your room when light hits it. |
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Gold Painted 19 x 14 Aparmita Thangka Painting |
US$ 333.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 19 x 14 Gold Painted Aparmita Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting is painted with Gold by the experienced artisans who have been devoted in the business from generations. |
Aparmita THE BUDDHA OF INFINITE LIGHT
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Aparmita is the name given to Amitabha in his character of bestower of longevity. Aparmita may be turned either a Crowned Buddha or a Bodhisattva and is therefore richly clad and wears the thirteen ornaments. His hair is painted blue and falls on either side to his elbows or may be curiously coiled. Aparmita is seated like Buddha and his hands lie on his lap in Dhyana Mudra holding the ambrosia vase, his special emblem. The vase is richly decorated and from the cover fall four strings of beads which represent sacred pills. In the preliminary worship, the pills made from buttered dough and the ambrosia brewed from spirit or beer and offered in a skull bowl to the great image of Aparmita. The lama then places a vajra on the ambrosia vase, which the image of Amitayus holds in its lap, and applies a cord, which is attached to the vajra, his own heart. The wine in the ambrosia vase is then consecrated and the people partake of it as well as of the sacred pills with the firm conviction that there lives will be prolonged through their faith in Aparmita.
In this 19 x 14 Aparmita Tibetan Scroll Painting is seated like Buddha and his hands lie on his lap in Dhyana Mudra holding the ambrosia vase, his special emblem. The vase is richly decorated and from the cover fall four strings of beads which represent sacred pills. Aparmita wears the thirteen ornaments and his hair is painted blue and falls on either side to his elbows or may be curiously coiled. |
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Gold Painted 19 x 14 Palden Lhamo Thangka Painting |
US$ 333.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 19 x 14 Gold Painted Palden Lhamo Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting is painted with Gold by the experienced artisans who have been devoted in the business from generations. |
Palden Lhamo
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Palden Lhamo (Sanskrit: Shridevi) is the female companion of Mahakala and is his equal in power. Palden Lhamo is depicted in a peaceful form as Machig Palden Lhamo, sitting on a lotus, wearing a crown of jewels, holding a bowl of jewels in her left hand and holding a standard of rainbow colors in her right. In her wrathful form, she rides a mule, has flaming red hair, three red eyes and sharp fangs.
Palden Lhamo is usually depicted in nakthang [black-ground scroll style] crossing the sea of blood riding side-saddle on a white mule. There is an eye on the left rump of the mule which is the place where her irate husband's arrow found a mark. Palden Lhamo had killed her son and used his flayed skin as a saddle blanket. |
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Gold Painted 19 x 14 Vajrapani Thangka Painting |
US$ 333.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 19 x 14 Gold Painted Vajrapani Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting is painted with Gold by the experienced artisans who have been devoted in the business from generations. |
Vajrapani
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Vajrapani doesn't many newcomers to Buddhism, look very Buddhist at all. He is a Bodhisattva who represents the energy of the enlightened mind, and his mantra also symbolizes that quality. He's pictured dancing wildly within a halo of flames, which represent transformation. He holds a vajra (thunderbolt) in his right hand, which emphasizes the power to cut through the darkness of delusion. Vajrapani looks wrathful, but as a representation of the enlightened mind, he's completely free from hatred. His mantra is simply his name, which means "wielder of the thunderbolt", framed between the mystical syllables Om and Hum. This mantra helps us to gain access to the irrepressible energy that Vajrapani symbolizes. A familiarity with Vajrapani does, of course, help here, although the sound of the mantra is itself rather energetic. |
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Gold Painted 19 x 14 Vajrasattva Shakti Thangka Painting |
US$ 333.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 19 x 14 Gold Painted Vajrasattva Shakti Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting is painted with Gold by the experienced artisans who have been devoted in the business from generations. |
Vajrasattva The Sixth Dhyani Buddha
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Vajrasattva, the sixth Dhyani Buddha, is regarded as the priest of the Five Dhyani Buddhas. Vajrasattva is the Buddha of Purification. Vajrasattva is not represented in the stupa like other Dhyani Buddhas, but independent shrines are dedicated to his worship. Vajrasattva wears all ornaments, rich dress and a crown. Vajrasattva is white in color. Vajrasattva sits cross legged in the meditative pose like other Dhyani Buddhas. Vajrasattva always carries the vajra in his right hand with palm upwards against the chest and ghanta (bell) in the left hand resting upon the left thigh. As the "work" or Karma protector, Vajrasattva also manifests the energies of all Buddhas. Any practice of Vajrasattva is related to the practices of confession and purification as present in all Buddhist traditions.
This beautiful Vajrasattva Thangka Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting he is shown with his consort in white, signifying his immaculate purity in Dhyana asana. Vajrasattva right hand holds the vajra at the level of his heart while his left hand clasps the bell. The bell is said to symbolize wisdom and the vajra signifies the means of utilizing this wisdom. Together the vajra and the bell symbolize the fusion of all polarities, including masculine and feminine qualities, in one Enlightened experience. |
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Gold Painted 18.2 x 14 Shakyamuni Buddha Thangka Painting |
US$ 333.00 |
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Speciality: Beautifully Painted 18.2 x 14 Gold Painted Shakyamuni Buddha Tibetan Thangka Scroll Painting is painted with Gold by the experienced artisans who have been devoted in the business from generations. |
Shakyamuni Buddha The Enlightened One
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Beyond the pain and pressures, the toil and tears of life, away from illusory scene of transience and impermanence, transcending loving and halting transistorizes of this world, is the Enlightened One, Shakyamuni, the Sage of the Sakyas, Gautama Buddha. Gautama has overcome the temptations of Mara and of his demons in their innumerable aspects, some terrifying, some monstrous and some voluptuous. The intense inner struggle of Gautama makes him an immediately human figure to us. Mara tries to break him even when he has attained complete enlightenment and tempts him to vanish into nirvana and leave mankind in darkness. The Buddha is serene and motionless. Gautam Buddha has passed the raging fury of illusory forms. The Sage is supremely Enlightened One, aware of the cause of suffering and of the way to attain liberation from them. Gautam Buddha calls the Earth Goddess to witness by his earth-touching gesture or bhumi-sparsha-mudra. The right hand stretches down to the earth, the palm inside and all fingers straight. By this gesture, Gautam Buddha destroys all the demons of the earth. While the right hand of the Buddha is in the gesture of touching the earth, his left hand holds the alms bowl. Gautam Buddha is seated with legs crossed in the lotus position or Padmasana, on a moon disk, placed on a lotus.
This beautiful 18.2 x 14 Shakyamuni Buddha Sculpture has his left hand extended in the Bhumisparsa gesture, the mudra of witness. His left hand lies in the lap with palm upward. This is the gesture of "touching the earth" or "calling the earth to witness," commemorating Buddha's victory over temptation by the demon Mara. Shakyamuni Buddha is seated on a Padmasana pedestal of lotus petals arranged in a row. This is one of the most popular portrayals of Shakyamuni at the moment of his full enlightenment under the Bodhi tree at Bodhgaya. |
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