Artwork Page for Winged Atlas-Hercules

Details / Information for Winged Atlas-Hercules

Winged Atlas-Hercules

200s CE
Medium
schist
Measurements
Overall: 38.1 cm (15 in.)
Public Domain
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This figure combines the attributes of Atlas, Hercules, and Vajrapani.

Description

In Buddhist art of the Gandharan region during the time of heightened contact with the Mediterranean world, the figure of Atlas was adopted, but given wings so as to appear superhuman. This figure has been conflated with the image of Hercules, who wears the skin of the Nemean lion, and relieved Atlas of his duties for a short time. Repeated images of composite Atlas-like figures surrounded the base of the monuments called stupas, which were solid domes, and can be understood as symbols for the sky, which would have appeared as though supported by rows of titanic figures. Other examples of this figure hold a thunderbolt (vajra) in one hand, suggesting that he could also allude to Vajrapani, an early protector divinity of the Buddha. Images of Vajrapani can combine attributes of Hercules, Zeus, and Hermes.
A sculpture in schist, a dark stone, depicts a muscular Atlas-Hercules crouching on a rocky base. He wears a lion skin over his head, knotted at his chest, and has a thick mustache and wide eyes. His right leg is tucked beneath him while the left knee is raised. Feathered wings emerge from his shoulders, though the wing on our right is fragmented. His left arm is broken off below the elbow.

Winged Atlas-Hercules

200s CE

Pakistan, Gandhara, Gandhara period

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