ANIMAL
AND HUMAN
Animals
are linked in Indian and Southeast Asian art from the earliest times,
with animal forms modified into a variety of beings, some real, some
imaginary, and some part human and part animal. Certainly the most
popular of the part human/part animal beings is Ganesha (Fig. 10),
who has the head of an elephant and the body of a corpulent human
being. His vehicle is, ironically, the rat. One story of the creation
of this adorable god, has it that Parvati has conceived Ganesha alone,
as she longs for a son that her husband, the ascetic Shiva, would
not help her to produce. Parvati makes Ganesha the guard of her bedroom
while Shiva is gone, and when he returns having never seen Ganesha,
he becomes angry when denied to his wife's bedroom. There is a fight,
and the mighty Shiva severs Ganesha's human head. Parvati is outraged,
and demands that Shiva bring Ganesha back to life, which he does by
using an elephant's head as a handy replacement. However, this transformation
gives Ganesha immense powers, among them the ability to remove obstacles
and ultimately grant success.
In
the relief of the Seven Mothers (Saptamatrikas), each of whom is a
consort of a major god, their respective animal vehicles are evident
below each goddess (Fig. 18). Just as Shiva has a vehicle, the bull
Nandi, or Vishnu has the bird Garuda, the Mothers have animal vehicles.
These animals serve to identify the different Mothers. They further
signify the deities' characteristics and powers. In this relief, Kaumari,
for example, has the peacock and Mahesvari has, like her consort Shiva,
the bull. The presence of animals together with human forms (often
as deities) is a constant in Hindu iconography.