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Kanha

16th century

Rubin Museum of Art

Rubin Museum of Art
New York, United States

Kanha, "The Black One," one of the most popular of the eighty-four Indian great Tantric adepts (mahasiddha), lived in India around the seventh or eighth century. He was originally a Hindu yogi, but after becoming the primary disciple of the mahasiddha Virupa, Kanha entered a lineage that eventually became foundational to the Sakya tradition, one of the four main schools of Tibetan Buddhism.

His brow furrowed in an intense expression of concentration, he bears the characteristics of an accomplished ascetic. He sits in a yogic pose on an antelope hide draped over a patterned cushion, his right leg supported by a strap. His long matted hair is piled on top of his head in a massive coil and bone ornaments cross his chest. This solid, impressive sculpture once belonged to a set of the Path and Result (Lam 'bras) lineage portraits of the teachers in the Sakya School lineage.

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  • Title: Kanha
  • Date: 16th century
  • Date Created: 16th century
  • Physical Dimensions: H 14.5 x W 9.75 x D 7.25 in.
  • Type: Sculpture
  • Rights: Rubin Museum of Art, C2003.23.4
  • Medium: Copper alloy
  • Place of Creation: Tibet
  • Exhibition History: Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., "Lama, Patron, Artist: The Great Situ Panchen" (03/13/10 - 07/18/10), Rubin Museum of Art, "Patron and Painter: Situ Panchen and the Revival of the Encampment Style" (02/06/09 - 08/17/09), Crow Collection of Asian Art, Dallas, TX, "What is Tibetan Art?" (09/14/07 - 04/27/08), Smith College Museum of Art, Northampton, MA, "Aesthetics of the Sacred: The Buddhist Art of Tibet" (05/04/07 - 08/04/07), Rubin Museum of Art, "Holy Madness: Portraits of Tantric Siddhas" (02/11/06 - 09/03/06), Rubin Museum of Art, "Methods of Transcendence" (10/02/04 - 01/11/05), Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., "Himalayas: An Aesthetic Adventure" (10/18/03 - 01/11/04), Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL, "Himalayas: An Aesthetic Adventure" (03/26/03 - 03/26/03)
Rubin Museum of Art

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