Iconographic forms:-
Chola Dynasty statue depicting Shiva dancing as nataraja (Los Angeles County Museum of Art). |
The depiction of Shiva as Nataraja (Sanskrit: naṭarāja, "Lord of Dance") is popular. The names Nartaka ("dancer") and Nityanarta ("eternal dancer") appear in the Shiva Sahasranama. His association with dance and also with music is prominent in the Puranic period. In addition to the specific iconographic form known as Nataraja, various other types of dancing forms (Sanskrit: nṛtyamūrti) are found in all parts of India, with many well-defined varieties in Tamil Nadu in particular. The two most common forms of the dance are the Tandava, which later came to denote the powerful and masculine dance as Kala-Mahakala associated with the destruction of the world. When it requires the world or universe to be destroyed, Shiva does it by the Tandava, and Lasya, which is graceful and delicate and expresses emotions on a gentle level and is considered the feminine dance attributed to the goddess Parvati. Lasya is regarded as the female counterpart of Tandava. The Tandava-Lasya dances are associated with the destruction-creation of the world.
Dakshinamurthy (Dakṣiṇāmūrti) literally
describes a form (mūrti) of Shiva facing south (dakṣiṇa). This
form represents Shiva in his aspect as a teacher of yoga, music, and wisdom and
giving exposition on the shastras. This iconographic form for
depicting Shiva in Indian art is mostly from Tamil Nadu. Elements of this
motif can include Shiva seated upon a deer-throne and surrounded by sages who
are receiving his instruction.
An
iconographic representation of Shiva called Arshnarishvara (Ardhanārīśvara)
shows him with one half of the body as male and the other half as female.
According to Ellen Goldberg, the traditional Sanskrit name for this form is
best translated as "the lord who is half woman", not as
"half-man, half-woman".
Shiva
is often depicted as an archer in the act of destroying the triple
fortresses, Tripura, of the Asuras. Shiva's name Tripurantaka ( Tripurāntaka),
"ender of Tripura", refers to this important story.
Lingam:-
Shiva Lingam with tripundra. |
Apart from anthropomorphic images of Shiva, he is also represented in aniconic form of a lingam. These are depicted in various designs. One common form is the shape of a vertical rounded column in the centre of a lipped, disk-shaped object, the yoni, symbolism for the goddess Shakti. In Shiva temples, the linga is typically present in its sanctum sanctorum and is the focus of votary offerings such as milk, water, flower petals, fruit, fresh leaves, and rice. According to Monier Williams and Yudit Greenberg, lingaliterally means "mark, sign or emblem", and also refers to a "mark or sign from which the existence of something else can be reliably inferred". It implies the regenerative divine energy innate in nature, symbolized by Shiva.Some scholars, such as Wendy Doniger, view linga merely as an erotic phallic symbol, although this interpretation is criticized by others, including Swami Vivekananda,Sivananda Saraswati and S.N. Balgangadhara. According to Moriz Winternitz, the linga in the Shiva tradition is "only a symbol of the productive and creative principle of nature as embodied in Shiva", and it has no historical trace in any obscene phallic cult.
The
worship of the lingam originated from the famous hymn in the Atharva-Veda
Samhitâ sung in praise of the Yupa-Stambha, the
sacrificial post. In that hymn, a description is found of the beginningless and
endless Stambha or Skambha, and it is shown that the
said Skambha is put in place of the eternal Brahman. Just
as the Yajna (sacrificial) fire, its smoke, ashes, and flames,
the Soma plant, and the ox that used to carry on its back the
wood for the Vedic Sacrifice gave place to the conceptions of the
brightness of Shiva's body, his tawny matted hair, his blue throat, and the
riding on the bull of the Shiva, the Yupa-Skambha gave place
in time to the Shiva-Linga. In the text Linga Purana,
the same hymn is expanded in the shape of stories, meant to establish the glory
of the great Stambha and the superiority of Shiva as Mahadeva.
The
oldest known archaeological linga as an icon of Shiva is the
Gudimallam lingam from 3rd-century BCE. In Shaivism pilgrimage tradition,
twelve major temples of Shiva are called Jyotirlinga, which means
"linga of light", and these are located across India.
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