A GRAY SCHIST TURBAN ORNAMENT WITH GARUDA AND NAGINI
A GRAY SCHIST TURBAN ORNAMENT WITH GARUDA AND NAGINI

GANDHARA, 2ND/3RD CENTURY

Details
A GRAY SCHIST TURBAN ORNAMENT WITH GARUDA AND NAGINI
GANDHARA, 2ND/3RD CENTURY
A rounded, ridged ornament depicting Garuda capturing a female figure with his arms and beak, her right hand raised up, a string of beads connecting the sides of Garuda’s wings to the leaves beneath Nagini’s feet
4 ½ in. (11.4 cm.) high
Provenance
Collection of Rita Perry, Lörrach, Germany, acquired between 1963-1972

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Lot Essay

This scene depicts Garuda, the bird-like creature and mount of Vishnu. He eats snakes daily in vengeance against the Naga tribes, the snakes who had turned his mother into a slave. Here he is depicted capturing a nagini, a beautiful female representation of a naga. This scene mirrors the event in Greek mythology when Zeus turns into an eagle and kidnaps the boy Ganymede. This motif is often depicted in the headdresses of images of Avalokiteshvara and Padmapani, see I. Kurita, Gandharan Art II: The World of the Buddha, 2003, p.311

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