Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
Sheetala, the smallpox goddess, is simultaneously benevolent and dangerous: she can both protect and infect, bless and curse devotees with smallpox and other diseases. Persons scarred by smallpox are believed to have been graced by her. She is appeased so that she does not infect her worshippers. Her name, Sheetala, “Cool One,” refers to her birth out of a cooled sacrificial fire. The rippled curtains above her are suggestive of theatrical tableau and Sheetalapala (The Drama of Sheetala) that was performed in Bengal. She sits astride her vehicle ( vahana ), the donkey, regarded as an inauspicious animal.
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Leaf from a Kalighat album: Hanuman attacks Indrajit holding
Leaf from a Kalighat album: The Goddess Kali (recto); Kali S
Leaf from a Kalighat album: Rama and Sita enthroned (recto);
Krishna Ferrying Radha Across the Yamuna River (recto); Pari
Leaf from a Kalighat album: Hari-Hara (recto); Vasudeva (Kri
Shri Gobinda Chandra Roy (Indian, active late 1800s) — Leaf
Sheetaladevi: The Smallpox Goddess (recto), from a Kalighat
Leaf from a Kalighat album: Two Aspects of Kali
Leaf from a Kalighat album: Parvati Placing a Wedding Garlan
Leaf from a Kalighat album: Krishna as Kali worshipped by Ra
Winged Apsara with a Horn (recto); Jagannatha Trio (verso)
Krishna with Radha and Two Attendants (recto); Jagannath, Su