The four-armed deity's ample form signifies her capacity to nourish and sustain. Though devoid of any overtly sexual characteristics the artist nevertheless has embellished her with some graceful feminine attributes expressed in her essentially curvaceous form, highlighted for example through her flowing robes and the slight contours marking the curves and folds of her stomach. The rich vegetative motives framing her in the background express her fertilizing nature.
Rising from the depths of water and expanding its petals on the surface, the lotus (kamala) is the most beautiful evidence offered to the eye of the self-engendering fertility of the bottom. Through its appurtenance, it gives proof of the life-supporting power of the all-nourishing cosmic waters, the infinite ocean out which all elements of the universe arise, and back into which they must again dissolve.
Of Related Interest:
Lakshmi the Bestower of Riches (Batik Painting on Cotton)
Sri Maha Lakshmi Yantra (Brass Etching)
Lakshmi in Sari (Brass Statue)
Goddess Lakshmi (South Indian Temple Wood Carving)
Lakshmi Goddess of Wealth (Silver Necklace)
I Bow to The Great Goddess Lakshmi (Granter of Wealth and Prosperity) (Prayer Shawl)
Invocation to Lakshmi (Hardcover Book)
Lakshmi and Saraswati - Tales in Mythology and Art (Article)
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