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Avowed Protector
    Dorje Lekpa
    
(painting no. 90555)

Collection: Southern Alleghenies Museum of Art
Origin: Tibet
Date: 1800-1899
Paint: Ground Mineral Pigment
Ground Material: Cotton
Lineage: Nyingma


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Garwa'i Nagpo (English: the Blacksmith); the main attendant to the Avowed Protector Dorje Lekpa (Sanskrit: Vajra Sadhu).

Wrathful with one face and two hands, he is dark blue in colour, with three eyes, bared fangs and bright orange hair flaming upward. The right hand holds aloft a vajra hammer and the left a blacksmith's bellows made of tiger skin. Adorned with a crown of five dry skulls and gold earrings he is lavishly attired in variously coloured full-length garments and felt boots. Riding atop a brown goat with twisted horns he is surrounded by grey smoke and wisps of orange flame. Coming forth from the outer edges of the smoke onto an Eastern Tibetan landscape are the messengers of the Protector - a black bear, reddish coloured fox, wild blue mule and dark grey wolf.

At the upper left is a lama with both hands placed in the 'earth witness' mudra (gesture); seated on a pink lotus.

Dorje Lekpa and his retinue were originally subjugated in Tibet by Guru Rinpoche Padmasambhava in the 8th century. They are avowed protectors and perform the special function of safeguarding the Nyingma Terma (treasure) tradition.

Jeff Watt 10-98



Photographed Image Copyright © 1999 Southern Alleghenies Museum of Art

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Copyright © 1998 Shelley and Donald Rubin Foundation, Shelley and Donald Rubin