Gold-Gilded Statue For Vajrakilaya Sadhana Practice
We are the artist of the Kathmandu valley who has finely handmade the Vajrakilaya Sadhana Practice Statue in the classic Himalayan Art style. The Vajrakilaya statue with his consort Khorlo Gyedunma features three heads, six arms, and four legs. Vajrakilaya is also known as Phurba in Tibetan. Vajrakilaya wraps his hands around his consort. He holds the mysterious three-bladed phurba dagger, which possesses a magical moment, between his two hands. The three blades of the phurba dagger remove one of the three primary barriers to spiritual perception. The three impediments are hatred, sensual desire, and ignorance. The three-pointed tip of the phurba blade also symbolizes a center of interest for the general people on the enormous emptiness phenomenon. Vajrakailaya is highlighted with dark acrylic paint, while his consort has a red hue of acrylic paintings. We molded the figurine using copper and gilded it using genuine 24K gold. We used a hammer and small chisels to hand-carve the intricate design patterns. To do delicate carvings, artists must have decades of experience as he has to create intricate design patterns on a small surface area.
You can use this massive Vajrakilaya Statue with Consort for different Buddhist ceremonies, Rituals in Monasteries, and even for personal activities like daily Yoga and meditation.
Size: 36.6"/93cm (Height) x 29.5"/75cm (Base)
Weight: 50 kg
Material: 24K Gold Gilded, Copper Body, Acrylic Paintings
Vajrakilaya (Dorje Phurpa), also known as Vajrakumara (Dorje Zhonu, Youthful Vajra), is the wrathful Heruka deity that embodies the enlightened activity of all the Buddhas. Vajrakilaya is one of the eight Heruka deities of the Nyingma tantras. Vajrakilaya is also the personal meditational deity of Guru Padmasambhava. He practiced meditation on Vajrakilaya when many obstacles manifested before his display of attaining enlightenment.