A JAIN SANDSTONE HEAD OF A JINA

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A JAIN SANDSTONE HEAD OF A JINA

Period / Age: ca. 11th - 12th Century AD, India, Rajasthan

Provenance: Private English Collection

Dimensions:

Height: 23cm (9") (excl. base)
Weight: 7.7Kg

Well carved with an ovoid face showing a serene expression with open almond-shaped eyes below elegantly arched eyebrows.
The full lips are pursed to form a subtle smile, flanked by long ears, the hair arranged in tight curls surmounted by a floral cap.

CONDITION: Good condition commensurate with age, extensive wear and losses. Mounted on a modern base.

According to the Jain tradition and its doctrine of non-violence, a Jina (also “Conqueror” or Tirthankara) represents the highest stage of a supreme being, of which there are 24 in number. This head can be identified as that of a Jina by the lack of an ushnisha, the domed protuberance on the head that is characteristic of Buddha, while all other features of an enlightened being are shared. A specific iconographic element are the almond-shaped eyes, shaded by the eyelids, with a gaze turned inward, reflecting a heightened mind in perfect equilibrium. According to the iconographic ideals, the hair is arranged in snail-like curls in gently undulating rows, the arched eyebrows follow the curved outline of the margosa leaves, and together with the bridge of the nose, dividing the face into equal parts at 120 degrees, the eyes are like lotus petals, the nose akin to a sesame flower (tilaphula), the lips like the bimba fruit, the elongated earlobes a reference to his former princely life when jewels had weighed them down. Nature is thus sublimated into a rhythmic and sculptural form, emulating spiritual perfection in aesthetic terms.