Donate to the MIA ×
Collections / Explore the Collection
Today at the Museum

June 20, 2013

Third Thursday: Get Local

6 – 9 p.m.
museum-wide

TUNE IN to our new music partnership with 89.3 The Current at the debut of "Local Current Live at Third Thursday" with DJ David Campbell. HEAR LOCAL band more »

Sgrol-dkar (The White Tara or White Savioress)
Title:Sgrol-dkar (The White Tara or White Savioress)
Artist:Artist Unknown
Date:18th century
Creation Place:Asia, Tibet
Credit Line:The John R. Van Derlip Fund and Gift of funds from Ingrid Lenz and Alfred H...
Accession Number:91.23.2
Tara, the goddess of mercy, is one of the most popular deities of Tibetan Buddhism. She is incarnated in two principal forms, green and white, symbolizing night and day, respectively. Both are consorts of Avalokitesvara, the bodhisattva of compassion and the patron deity of the largest school of Tibetan Buddhism, the Yellow Hat Sect. Here Tara holds in her left hand a lotus blossom, symbol of spiritual purity and her standard attribute. Her right hand expresses the gesture of bestowing compassion, the varada mudra. In the upper right corner is Padmasambhava, the great Indian teacher, with Karmavajra on the left and a lama between. At the bottom of the thanka are three protective images, including Mahakala and Lhamo who act here as wrathful guardians of Buddhist thought.