Padmasambhava was actually renowned for his knowledge of dharani (mystical sentences) and of their efficacious application; he was warmly welcomed in Tibet. He remained fifty years in the country, founding monasteries and teaching the Tantra-Yogacharya doctrine. He is said to have subdues all the malignant gods of Tibet, sparing only those that converted to Buddhism and promised to be defenders (Dharmapala) of the doctrine. Padmasambhava, in his turn, enrolled them in the Mahayana Pantheon and to saw to it that they were properly worshipped. He claimed to have received from the dakini the books from which he acquired his miraculous powers.
In course of time Padmasambhava was deified and incarnated into eight forms, one for each of eight important actions he performed during his lifetime. The eight manifestations of Padmasambhava are as follows:
1. Vajradhara of Urgayana (Oddiyana)
2. King Padmaraja
3. King Loden Chogsay
4. Suryaprabha
5. Rdor-je-gro-lod (Vajradamodara)
6. Guru Drakpo
7. The monk Indrasena
8. The Buddha Shakyasimha
In the present painting Padmasambhava has manifested as Guru Vajradhara Father-Mother. He incarnates himself in the five mystical families of Mahavajradhara for spreading the lofty and secret teachings of esoteric mantra. Vajrapani appeared to the realizations in the cave of Kosha-chandra in Nepal. From the heart of the Guru a sheaf of light descends to bless, to enlighten. Thence he was called as Guru Vajradhara or Guru Vajradhara of Urgayana (Oddiyana). Here he is seated in crossed-legged with his consort in Yab-yum>. The complexion of his body is blue. His right hand holds a vajra and also embracing his consort; the left hand holds a vajra-ghanta. He is adorned with the costumes, crown and ornaments of a Bodhisattva. The complexion of his consort is white. Her legs are wrapped around her consort in embrace. Her right hand is around the neck of the Guru and the left holds a cranium. She also wears a crown, and many ornaments, a scarf and dhoti.
A Nyingma lama, wearing Padmasambhava's hat, is seated in the upper center in a rainbow light in the clouds. There is a cave just below the upper right corner; a seat of a lama on the door of the cave, and a lama is flying over the cave in rainbow light. This perhaps depicts the supernatural powers of the lama. Below the cave a siddha is seated with a cranium and before him is a female devotee, facing the Guru with offerings. At the lower left corner a Nyingma lama is seated on a cushion and before him is a naked yogini (?). The lower right corner is filled with the figures of a siddha . The background of the painting depicts beautiful mountainous landscape, rocks, caves, buildings, lakes and animals etc. The composition and color-combination is very impressive.
References:
A.Getty, The Gods Of Northern Buddhism, Tokyo, 1962
B.Bhattacharyya, The Indian Buddhist Iconography, Calcutta, 1968
M.M. Rhie & R.A.F. Thurman, World of Transformation: Tibetan Art of Wisdom and Compassion, New York, 1999
This description by Dr. Shailendra Kumar Verma, Ph.D. His doctorate thesis being on the "Emergence and Evolution of the Buddha Image (From its inception to 8th century A.D)."
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