Jain Svetambara Tirthankara in Meditation

India (Gujarat or Rajasthan)

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 241

At the heart of daily Jain religious observance is the veneration of the image of the jina, the conceptual basis of which is the pan-Indian ideal of the yogic ascetic. This ancient practice, celebrated in the Vedas (the most ancient Hindu texts), equates the acquisition of spiritual wisdom with the pursuit of advanced forms of meditation and withdrawal from material comforts. In Jainism, the twenty-four liberated souls who are recognized as having attained this elevated state are worshipped as tirthankaras (ford crossers). This jina-tirthankara, seated on a bejeweled throne cushion, was probably intended to represent Mahavira, the historical founder of Jainism, a near contemporary of the Buddha Shakyamuni in the fifth century B.C.

#7908. Jain Svetambara Tirthankara in Meditation, Seated on a Throne Cushion

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Jain Svetambara Tirthankara in Meditation, Marble, India (Gujarat or Rajasthan)

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