This sculpture can be identified as Vishnu by its crown, its four arms, and the remains of the attributes it carried. In its surviving right hand is a round shape representing the earth; its left hand rests on the handle of a club symbolizing might in battle, the shaft of which has broken away. The missing attributes—the war discus, associated with the sun, and the conch shell, associated with the world’s waters—would have emphasized how Vishnu encompasses fundamental natural forces.
Vishnu (together with one of his incarnations, the princely hero Rama) was often associated both in India and Southeast Asia with powerful, righteous kingship. Such a large, imposing, and meticulously crafted image as this would have been commissioned from the royal workshop, and would have been enshrined in a temple under court patronage, though we do not know whichTwo centuries later, a king of Angkor who associated himself with Vishnu built the world’s largest temple dedicated to Vishnu, the monumental Angkor Wat.
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