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In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
When Mahavira chose to renounce his life as a prince to seek omniscience and ultimate liberation, he traveled from his palace to the countryside until he came to a wooded park. The text states that under an ashoka tree in the park, Mahavira removed his ornaments and garlands and plucked out his hair with his fists in five handfuls. In the illumination he unflinchingly grasps a fistful of hair, his pectoral muscle flexed with the effort. Indra, the four-armed king of the gods, sits under a royal canopy on a lower level than Mahavira and praises his extreme act of self-mortification. The dramatic moment is effectively conveyed through the pert and wiry line drawing and bold palette of pigments made from lapis lazuli, vermilion, and lavish amounts of gold.
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Text, Folio 48 (recto), from a Kalpa-sutra
Text, Folio 43 (recto), from a Kalpa-sutra
Text, Folio 29 (verso), from a Kalpa-sutra
Text, Folio 36 (verso), from a Kalpa-sutra
Text, Folio 34 (recto), from a Kalpa-sutra
Text, Folio 39 (recto), from a Kalpa-sutra
Text, Folio 54 (recto), from a Kalpa-sutra
Text, Folio 53 (verso), from a Kalpa-sutra
Text, Folio 44 (recto), from a Kalpa-sutra
Text, Folio 56 (verso), from a Kalpa-sutra
Text, Folio 35 (recto), from a Kalpa-sutra
Text, Folio 22 (recto), from a Kalpa-sutra