Origin Location | Tibet |
---|---|
Date Range | 1600 - 1699 |
Lineages | Nyingma and Sakya |
Size | 88.90x63.50cm (35x25in) |
Material | Ground Mineral Pigment, Fine Gold Line, Black Background on Cotton |
Collection | Rubin Museum of Art |
Catalogue # | acc.# F1997.17.13 |
Classification: Deity
Appearance: Wrathful
Gender: Female
Dorje Rabtenma, (English: the Vajra Stable One), a form of Shri Devi originating in the Nyingmapa tradition, predominantly practiced in the Shalupa and Tsarpa sub-schools of Sakya.
Tibetan: Dor je rab ten ma
Fearsome in expression, maroon in colour, she has one face, three eyes, bared fangs and yellow hair flowing upward and out to the side. The right hand holds aloft a flaming sword and the left to the hip clutches a jewel-spitting mongoose bringing forth a stream of variously coloured gems. Crowned with a tiara of five white skulls, gold earrings, bone ornaments and snakes, and a long white snake necklace, she is adorned with a garland of severed heads - pink, green and blue. At the navel, emblazoned below flaccid hanging breasts is an emanating golden sun and above the head a white circle of the full moon. Wearing across the shoulders an upper garment of a human skin and elephant hide, the waist is wrapped with black and gold brocade. With the two feet shackled in iron chains, she sits atop a human skin saddle on a grey mule, above a sea of churning blood awash with human and animal corpses, completely surrounded by dark smoke and the red licks of flame of pristine awareness.
"Goddess Dorje Rabtenma, Great One, with a body maroon in colour, one face, two hands and three eyes; the body is covered by a human skin. Held in the right hand is a blazing sword; a mongoose grasped in the left, riding atop a three-legged mule." (Shalu Liturgical verse by Shakya Gelong Rinchen Namgyal).
At the top center is Padmasambhava, wearing monastic robes and a traditional red scholar's (pandita) hat. The right hand holds to the heart a vajra scepter and the left placed in the lap supports a black begging bowl. Seated at each side is a monk wearing a yellow meditation cloak, and on the right three figures wearing monastic robes and red meditation cloaks, performing various hand gestures (mudras). At the left are three in similar attire, the uppermost wearing a yellow pandita hat.
The mule of Rabtenma is led by an attendant with a sea monster head (makara), red in colour, guiding with a tether composed of a long green snake. At the middle left is a white peaceful wealth deity, holding an arrow and mongoose, riding a white horse; at the right side a black wrathful deity holding a spear riding a black horse. Slightly above and on each side are two wrathful female attendants, black and red, holding swords and skullcups, naked, standing in wild dancing postures. Along the bottom are six more wrathful figures in similar appearance. At the bottom center are three skullcups of wrathful offerings, in the middle a red torma (stylized food) with triangular flame and two smaller vessels of blood and nectar at the sides.
Dorje Rabtenma was the special protector for Buton Rinchen Drup Tamche Kyenpa (1290-1364) the founder of the Bulug-Shalu sub-school of the Sakya tradition of Tibetan Buddhism. The style of painting is nag tang - Black Scroll.
Lineage: Acharya Padmasambhava (distant lineage), Loton Dorje Wangchug, Chetsun Sherab Jungne (recent lineage), Tamche Kyenpa Buton Choje, etc.
Jeff Watt 5-99
Thematic Sets
Subject: Jonang, Bodong & Bulug Protector Deities
Buddhist Protector: Shri Devi, Dorje Rabtenma, Page
Tradition: Shalu/Bulug Main Page
Buddhist Protector: Shri Devi (Masterworks)
Painting Type: Black Ground Masterworks
Subject: Eyes in Himalayan Art
Buddhist Protector: Shri Devi Iconography
Collection of RMA: Black Ground Masterworks
Collection of RMA: Shri Devi Masterworks
Buddhist Protectors: Enlightened
Collection of Rubin Museum of Art: Painting Gallery 2
Collection of RMA: Art Page
Buddhist Protector: Shri Devi, Dorje Rabtenma Masterworks
Painting Type: Black Ground Main Page
Buddhist Protector: Shri Devi Main Page
Tradition: Nyingma, Enlightened Protectors
Buddhist Protectors: Enlightened (Female)