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Indian and Himalayan Art

Stupa
Chorten

Made in Tibet, Asia

11th - 14th century

Artist/maker unknown, Tibetan

Metal alloy
8 3/4 x 4 1/4 inches (22.2 x 10.8 cm)

Currently not on view

1999-29-1

Purchased with the Stella Kramrisch Fund and with funds contributed by an anonymous donor, 1999

Label

In Tibetan Buddhism a stupa represents the mind of a buddha (an enlightened being) and of Buddhist practitioners. This is a Kadam-style stupa, named for a religious order of Tibetan Buddhism that flourished solely between the eleventh and fourteenth centuries. The shape is classified as mahaparinirvana, indicating release from cyclic existence. Stupas are used for votive offerings, memorials, and reliquaries, and often contain consecratory items like paper prayers, incense, semi-precious and precious stones, or relics. This consecrated example is sealed with a metal plate stamped with a ritual implement called a visva-vajra, here unusually adorned with emerging flowers.

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