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Kurukulla’s origins trace back to early Tantric texts where she manifests as a powerful red goddess of the Lotus family closely associated with Padma (Amitabha Buddha). She embodies the energy of attraction and enchantment not in a worldly or manipulative sense but as the enlightened ability to draw beings toward virtue, the Dharma and the path of liberation. Known in Sanskrit as Kurukullā and in Tibetan as Rigjema or Kurukullema, she is invoked in practices designed to magnetize positive conditions, inspire devotion and subdue harmful influences through compassion. She is not an independent Buddha but an enlightened emanation arising to benefit beings with her irresistible spiritual power.
This Tibetan Buddhist thangka painting of Kurukulla is a striking example of Himalayan Vajrayana art, carefully hand-painted in Kathmandu, Nepal using natural mineral pigments and 24k gold. Kurukulla is one of the most revered semi-wrathful goddesses in Tibetan Buddhism, celebrated as the embodiment of magnetizing power, enchantment, and the transformative force of wisdom and compassion. In this thangka, Kurukulla is depicted with a radiant red body symbolizing the transformation of desire and passion into enlightened awareness. She has four arms. In her upper right hand she holds a flower bow. In her upper left hand she holds a flower arrow ready to shoot. In her lower right hand she holds a flower hook. In her lower left hand she holds a flower noose. These implements represent her ability to attract, bind and draw all beings into the path of wisdom and compassion. She is shown dancing gracefully on a prone figure which represents the subjugation of ego, ignorance and obstacles to spiritual progress. Around her neck she wears a garland of severed heads, a symbol of the transformation of negative tendencies and the cutting of delusion. She stands in a dynamic posture of movement and magnetizing energy surrounded by an aura of vibrant colors and sacred patterns which symbolize the play of enlightened activity.
Kurukulla holds a special place in Nepalese and Himalayan Buddhist practice. She is invoked in rituals for magnetizing positive conditions, drawing favorable circumstances and inspiring spiritual transformation. Her red form radiates the enlightened power of desire transformed into wisdom which makes her an especially beloved figure for those seeking to cultivate loving-kindness, attraction of virtue and the overcoming of inner obstacles. This authentic Tibetan thangka of Kurukulla from Nepal is both a sacred object of meditation and a work of art. It embodies magnetizing energy, spiritual transformation and the rich heritage of Himalayan Buddhism making it ideal for meditation, rituals or as a treasured piece of sacred art for home or temple.
Product Specifications
Subject: Kurukulla, semi-wrathful goddess of magnetizing power and enlightened attraction
Origin: Hand painted in Kathmandu, Nepal
Style: Traditional Tibetan Vajrayana thangka painting
Materials: Natural mineral pigments and 24k gold dust on cotton canvas
Depiction: Kurukulla with radiant red body, four arms holding a flower bow, flower arrow, flower hook, and flower noose, dancing on a prone figure, wearing a garland of severed heads, surrounded by vibrant sacred patterns representing magnetizing energy
Use: Ideal for Buddhist meditation, rituals of magnetizing and attraction, or as sacred Himalayan art for home or temple
Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jun 20 - Jun 25
US$40
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