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Photograph by David De Armas, Rubin Museum of Art, 2012.
Arhat Bakula Arhat Bakula
Photograph by David De Armas, Rubin Museum of Art, 2012.
Photograph by David De Armas, Rubin Museum of Art, 2012.

Arhat Bakula
Arhat Bakula

OriginTibet
Datelate 19th or 20th century
Dimensions33 1/4 x 25 x 2 1/4 in. (84.5 x 63.5 x 5.7 cm)
MediumPigments on cloth
Classification(s)
Credit LineRubin Museum of Art, Gift of Shelley and Donald Rubin
Object numberC2006.66.165
Himalayan Art Resources Number164
DescriptionThe genre of the sixteen arhats was adopted from China, and blue green landscapes are an integral part of these paintings. In Tibetan depictions of this genre the landscape opened up more and more over time, and in this version only the rocky outcrop on which the arhat is seated remains as a reflection of the Chinese model. The diagonal composition indicates that this painting was part of a set, with the arhat facing the direction of what would have been a central painting of the Buddha. It can be deduced that this painting is a rather recent production by the realistic rendering of two small gray elephants in the foreground.

Advanced in age, as typical of the group of sixteen arhats, Bakula is shown wearing loose monastic robes in red, green, and blue. He holds a brown mongoose with both hands, which ejects wish fulfilling jewels from its mouth. The pearls around the rock, the snow capped mountains in the background, the abundance of water, and the peony in the foreground are indicators of an auspicious setting. Two pairs of small animals--snow lions on top of the mountains and elephants in the foreground--further emphasize this theme. In the top left corner are two buddhas from the set of the “Thirty five Buddhas of Confession,” Ratnaprabha and Nagaraja.

Not on view