‘GOLDEN TARAS’ 50″ x 60″ acrylic on canvas. Tara, the goddess of universal compassion and the mother of liberation, represents enlightened action. Tara was born out of tears of compassion. Avalokiteshvara looked upon the world of suffering and wept. One Tara was born from the tears of the left eye and the other from those of the right. Together they symbolize unending compassion, laboring day and night to relieve suffering.
‘CHANDI: MY HEART BURNS’ 52″ x 28″ As the male gods became impotent during a long battle with the asuras their energies combined to create a supernova, Chandi, who slayed the demons. Chandi projects an overwhelming omnipotence, the most spectacular of all personifications of cosmic energy. Chandi is the angry, terrible and passionate one, violent and impetuous. Chandi bestows disaster as well as joy, riches, children and cures disease.
‘DURGA’, 54″ x 34″, acrylic on canvas in handmade walnut and copper frame, private collection. Durga represents the empowering and protective nature of motherhood.
‘PARVATI: UNDER THE FICUS’, 54″ x 26″, private commission.
Parvati, goddess of love, fertility and devotion, is recreative energy and power and the cause of bond that connects all beings. She is the voice of encouragement, reason, and freedom, as well as of resistance, power, action and retributive justice. This paradox symbolizes her willingness to adapt as the universal mother. Parvati’s numerous aspects reflect the Hindu belief that the feminine has universal range and her gender is not a limiting condition.
‘Daivika Apsara’ 60″ x 28″, acrylic on canvas. Daivika Apsara are divine ethereal female beings who inhabit the skies and are often depicted as taking flight. They are youthful, elegant, and superb in the art of dancing. Apsaras are sometimes compared to the muses of ancient Greece or seen as sensual supernatural female beings sent to distract a sage from ascetic practices.
‘Laukika Apsara’ 60″ x 28″, acrylic on canvas. Laukika Apsara are worldly female spirits who are are youthful, elegant, and superb in the art of dancing. Apsaras are sometimes compared to the muses of ancient Greece or seen as sent to distract a sage or spiritual master from his ascetic practices.
‘Yemayah’, 56” x 36”, acrylic on linen. Goddess Yemayah represents fecundity and the vastness of motherhood. As the giver of life she is strong and nurturing, yet furiously protective and destructive. Brought to the New World by the Yoruba people of Nigeria, she has been venerated for centuries as Protectress during the middle passage of slavery. Yemayah exemplifies active feminine energy, the very source of all life, the power of the ocean, the fury of destruction and is the agent of all change.
‘Vajrayoginī ‘ ‘Got to be Real’, 58″ x 38″, acrylic on canvas. Vajrayoginī is inarguably the supreme deity of the Tantric pantheon. No male Buddha, approaches her in metaphysical or practical import. She can transform mundane daily experiences into higher spiritual paths. Vajrayoginī’s practice is said to be well-suited to those with strong desirous attachment, and to those living in the current “degenerate age”.