According to Vedic literature, Rshabha is an epithet of Shiva. Etymologically speaking, it has the same roots as the word for bull (Nandi, Shiva’s most devoted companion, is a bull). As a deity, however, Rshabha is also considered to be one of the twenty-four avatars of Vishnu as well as the first Tirthankara of the Jains.
The work that you see on this page is a Tanjore painting. It depicts Lord Rshabha on the back of the fair Nandi. They are both bedecked in a world of gold and jewels, and a garland of lotusbuds cascades down Rshabha’s front. On His lap is the serene Devi Parvati, His wife.
The most striking feature of a Tanjore painting is the gold inlay work, of which there is plenty in this handpicked number. The tall crowns on the deities’ heads and the temple entrance structure in the foreground are hallmarks of South Indian art and iconography.
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