Traditionally Gold Gilded Hand Carved Bodhisattvas Sculpture Set Nepal
Green Tara, Vajrasattva, Chenrezig, Manjushri, and Amitayus are all part of this unique set of Bodhisattva sculptures. They are all hand-crafted in the same sizes and with similar intricate design patterns to match your meditation altar. The statue set are all carved from a copper body and gilded with 24k genuine gold over the face and various parts of the figure. Each statue is handcrafted in the same form factor, while the mudras they make vary by what they represent. The acrylic paint and silver-plated coating over the body of each statue further highlight the statue to a greater extent. Each statue of the set took our artists months of tireless work to craft the flawless design patterns on each statue.
This Himalayan art of the Bodhisattva statue set will be a priceless gift from Nepal for a practitioner like you.
Size: 20.8"/53cm (Height) x 14.1"/36cm (Base)
Weight: 53.49 kg
Material: 24K Gold Gilded, Copper Body, Acrylic Paintings, Silver Plated
Manjushri is known as the Wisdom Bodhisattva. He is the personification of wisdom as
the route to enlightenment. In Mahayana Buddhism, Manjushri is related to prajna.
Manjushri is regarded as a fully enlightened Buddha in Northern Buddhism's Tantric literature, with many manifestations and appearances covering all four divisions of Tantra, simple and complex in form. Manjushri is depicted in the Eleven Figurative Forms as Peaceful, Semi-peaceful, Wrathful, and Animal Featured.
Amitayus, often known as "The Buddha of Endless Life," is a sambhogakaya aspect of Amitabha, commonly linked with longevity. He is frequently depicted reclining and holding a vase with the nectar of immortality. One of the three gods of immortality, Amitayus is one of the three gods of immortality.
Tara is the savior, the personification of compassion, the one who reaches out and freely replies to everyone who is suffering. Tara is courageous and generous to a fault. Green Tara and White Tara are her most popular incarnations, though she occasionally appears as Red Tara and in Dakini form. "Om tare tuttare ture svaha," says Green Tara. White Tara's mantra is "om tare tuttare ture mama ayu Punya jnana pushtim kuru svaha," which means "om tare tuttare ture mama ayu Punya jnana pushtim kuru svaha."
Vajrasattva is typically regarded as the second patriarch in the Shingon Buddhist lineage, the first being Vairocana Buddha. According to Kukai's writings in Record of the Dharma Transmission, Nagarjuna encountered Vajrasatva in an iron tower in southern India, based on Amoghavajra's testimony. As recounted in the Mahavairocana Sutra, Vajrasatva inducted Nagarjuna into the abhiseka ceremony and entrusted him with the esoteric teachings he had gained from Vairocana Buddha. Kukai doesn't go into detail on Vajrasatva or his beginnings.
Chenrezig is the Compassionate Protector of Tibet and the Bodhisattva of Compassion. Tibetan Buddhists see His Holiness the Dalai Lama as the earthly manifestation of this compassion Buddha. Chenrezig tells us that the way to end our suffering is not to run away from our difficulties but to work through them with compassion for ourselves and others and embrace all sentient creatures with our heart's mercy and love.