Goddess Durga Slaying the Demon Mahisha second half of the 9th century Eastern India, Bihar, probably Gaya district Durga slaying Mahisha (Mahishamardini) is here represented in her multi-armed form, manifesting her supreme power as the dispeller of evil, personified in the buffalo demon (asura) Mahisha, seen slumped at her feet. Following the Devi Mahatmya text, she wields the mighty weapons lent to her by the assembly of male gods who singly could not defeat the demon. In this eight-armed form, Durga wields the mighty broad bladed sword above her head with which she has just decapitated the


Goddess Durga Slaying the Demon Mahisha second half of the 9th century Eastern India, Bihar, probably Gaya district Durga slaying Mahisha (Mahishamardini) is here represented in her multi-armed form, manifesting her supreme power as the dispeller of evil, personified in the buffalo demon (asura) Mahisha, seen slumped at her feet. Following the Devi Mahatmya text, she wields the mighty weapons lent to her by the assembly of male gods who singly could not defeat the demon. In this eight-armed form, Durga wields the mighty broad bladed sword above her head with which she has just decapitated the buffalo, whose severed head lies at her feet. With her remaining right hands she displays the discus weapon of Vishnu (also seen embedded in the buffalo’s side) while pulling an arrow from the quiver she wears on her back, and plunging Shiva’s trident (trusula) into the demon’s human form. With her lower left hand she grips the demon by a tress of his hair as she transfixes him with the trident as he emerges from the slain beast. In her raised left hands she holds the shield, poised as a counterpoint to the raised sword, and the noose, with which she binds her enemies, and the long bow with an elaborate handgrip, which echoes the arrow and quiver here assumes one of the most dramatic poses for the goddess in all Indian art, which conveys to devotees the unequivocal power of the aroused devi, known in the iconographic literature as pratyalidhasana, a posture shared with some esoteric Buddhist imagery. Durga stands with one foot robustly raised on the beast’s back, and the other extended to anchor him to the ground. Her body is full and supple, and modelled with a remarkable artistry. The pronounced musculature of her stomach, for example, reveals the tension in her body as she uses her divine strength to plunge the trisula into the demon’s body. Her waist is slender, as are her limbs, whilst her breasts are firm and full. The prescriptive sastric text fr


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