If you're seeing this message, it means we're having trouble loading external resources on our website.

If you're behind a web filter, please make sure that the domains *.kastatic.org and *.kasandbox.org are unblocked.

Main content

The Hindu Deity Shiva

A product of the famous bronze-casting workshops of medieval South India, this image of Shiva projects the perfection of the deity. Following the style of the time, the artist has exaggerated the broadness of the figure’s shoulders and the narrowness of the waist, creating a beautiful, even sensuous, divine body. Like other bronze images of Hindu gods, this statue was designed to be carried through the streets during ceremonial processions to interact with worshipers, conferring blessings and receiving devotion.
A bronze statue of human-like figure whose arms are bent forward and whose hands are in front of its torso. The figure is wearing a tall, pointy hat, earrings and a necklace, and a belt or loincloth.
The Hindu deity Shiva 1300–1500. Tamil Nadu state. Bronze. Courtesy of the Asian Art Museum, The Avery Brundage Collection. B69S14

What is this object?

A product of the famous bronze-casting workshops of medieval South India, this image of Shiva projects the perfection of the deity. Following the style of the time, the artist has exaggerated the broadness of the figure’s shoulders and the narrowness of the waist, creating a beautiful, even sensuous, divine body. Like other bronze images of Hindu gods, this statue was designed to be carried through the streets during ceremonial processions to interact with worshipers, conferring blessings and receiving devotion.

Who is Shiva?

Shiva, one of the highest gods of Hinduism, has a complex character. He both creates and destroys the universe. He is an ascetic practicing extreme control of the senses and a devoted family man. At some moments, he shows tenderness and at others, fury.
Visual artists, poets, musicians, dancers, and storytellers recount Shiva’s stories and describe his perfection. The sculptor of this artwork, following the style of the time, has exaggerated the broadness of the figure’s shoulders and the narrowness of the waist, and treated lines such as the jeweled chain on the lower right leg and the sacred thread across the chest in a hyper-elegant manner.
Devotion to Shiva is conveyed not just in artworks but also in intensely expressive poems like this one:
Pure gold, first being, living in grove-encircled Pulamankai, he is my own; he is music, he is like the light of the morning sun.
— Adapted from Indira Viswanathan Peterson, “Poems to Siva: The Hymns of the Tamil Saints” (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1989), 11.

Shiva's Hair

The Hindu deity Shiva Detail 1300–1500. Tamil Nadu state. Bronze. Courtesy of the Asian Art Museum, The Avery Brundage Collection. B69S14
Shiva’s dreadlocked hair, a fashion still worn by many Indian ascetics or yogis today, has some stories to tell.
The crescent moon, barely visible in Shiva’s dreadlocks, reminds us of his power over the cycles of the universe and time.
Ganga, the goddess of the great River Ganges, also nestles in Shiva’s locks, reminding us of Shiva’s role as protector of the earth. When Ganga, in her form as a river, was sent from the heavens to earth, Shiva broke the river’s fall with his matted hair to save the earth from great destruction.

How was this sculpture made?

How did the bronze sculptor create such a figure? With a thousand year tradition, South Indian bronze sculptures are among the great artworks of the world. Sculptors first model the figure to be made in wax and cover the wax figure in clay. This gets baked to harden the clay and melt out the wax. Next, they pour molten bronze into the mold. When the bronze cools and hardens, they break off the clay and then clean and polish the metal. A wax model has turned into a sophisticated work of bronze.
Sculptors in South India continue to cast bronze figures using these time-honored methods today — the old traditions have survived uninterrupted.

Want to join the conversation?

No posts yet.