This bronze image presents Parvati as Bhogashakti, rendered with exceptional sensitivity to form, movement, and presence. She is seated in a relaxed yet attentive posture upon a lotus pedestal, her body slightly inclined, as though responding to an inner rhythm that animates her stillness.
Her towering jata-mukuta rises with architectural symmetry, while the locks around her face are arranged with a sense of gentle movement, as if stirred by a passing breeze. This subtle suggestion of motion gives the sculpture a living quality.
The torso bends softly, creating natural flesh folds rendered in metal, a hallmark of refined bronze work that transforms ideal beauty into felt reality.
Her features are balanced and symmetrical, the expression serene yet inwardly alert. The perfectly round Siraschakra clasping her hairdo, necklaces, yajnopavita, and the softly modeled silken dhoti are carved with restraint, enhancing the body without overpowering it.
This is Parvati not as passive consort, but as Bhogashakti, the force that draws the ascetic Shiva into action, whose presence awakens creation itself.
Send as free online greeting card
Email a Friend
Visual Search
Manage Wishlist