This bronze Lakshmi Narasimha presents a moment of profound transition, where the fierce energy of the man-lion incarnation settles into composure, held and transformed through the presence of his Shakti, Devi Lakshmi. Cast in the refined tradition of South Indian panchaloha, the sculpture carries both weight and fluidity.
Narasimha is seated in lalitasana, a posture of royal ease that signals the restoration of order after the violence of Hiranyakashipu’s destruction. One leg rests firmly upon the lotus pedestal while the other folds inward, creating a balanced yet relaxed stance.
The leonine face retains its defining features, wide eyes, pronounced fangs, and a powerful jaw, yet the expression is no longer charged with fury. It has softened into a state of watchful protection, where strength is held in restraint rather than release.
Lakshmi sits upon his left, the vama-bhaga, the side associated with the heart and with generative energy. Her presence is not ornamental but transformative. She stabilises the force of Narasimha, drawing it inward, shaping it into benevolence. Her form is composed, her gaze steady, holding a lotus, reinforcing her role as the bearer of prosperity and the mediator between divine power and human devotion.
The prabhavali that frames the deities establishes Narasimha as Vishnu himself. Each segment of the aureole holds a distinct form of the Dashavatara, visually articulating that all incarnations emanate from the Lord seated at the centre of the composition. Makara holds the arches with Hanuman and Garuda standing with joined hands, the divine devotees of Vishnu’s sacred space. The arch becomes a cosmic register, enclosing the central form within a larger cycle of preservation and intervention.
Between each of these arched divisions, lotuses bloom with deliberate rhythm. The lotus, rising unsullied from the depths, signifies purity, emergence, and spiritual unfolding. Placed between the avatars, it acts as a connective principle, suggesting that each manifestation of Vishnu arises from the same underlying order of creation, untouched by the turbulence it enters to resolve. The repetition of the lotus across the arch creates a visual continuity, binding multiplicity into coherence.
The sculpture reveals exceptional craftsmanship through the lost-wax casting method. The surfaces move between smooth, rounded modelling in the bodies and sharply defined detailing in the ornaments, crowns, and architectural elements. This contrast heightens the visual experience, allowing the eye to travel between mass and intricacy. The panchaloha alloy has matured into a rich green-brown patina, lending the bronze a sense of depth and time, as though the form has slowly emerged through layers of history.
What this work ultimately holds is a resolved energy. The narrative of Narasimha is one of rupture and restoration, but here, that arc has reached stillness. The divine is no longer in the act of intervention; it is present, composed, and accessible for his devotees.
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