G766.2 SHIVA LINGHAM STONE (NARMADESHVARA LINGHAM)


Sculpture

G766.2 SHIVA LINGHAM STONE (NARMADESHVARA LINGHAM)

CENTRAL INDIA, MADHYA PRADESH

PROBABLY FROM ONKAR MANDHATA ON THE NARMADA RIVER

20TH CENTURY

H. 17.5 CMS, 7 INS

An ovoid, dark grey polished stone with reddish-brown inclusions, naturally tumbled with a highly smooth and polished surface.

The Narmada River at Onkar Mandhata, is one of India’s seven holy sites. Villagers gather this unique cryptocrystalline quartz from shallow riverbeds and hand-polish them to produce a stone with perfectly balanced proportions. The Shiva Lingham is a symbolic representation of the Hindu god Shiva and believed by Hindus to have sacred life-affirming properties.

Comparable examples were included in the important Tantra exhibition held in London at the Hayward Gallery in 1971. For two related examples see nos. 163-164 in Philip Rawson, The Art of Tantra, London: Thames and Hudson, 1978.

Provenance: Private English collection