Sale on canvas prints! Use code ABCXYZ at checkout for a special discount!
Boundary: Bleed area may not be visible.
The watermark at the lower right corner of the image will not appear on the final product.
by Vrindavan Das
$25.00
Size
Bottom Style
Image Size
Background Color
Product Details
Dress it up, dress it down, or use it to stay organized while you're on the go. Our zip pouches can do it all. They're crafted with 100% poly-poplin fabric, double-stitched at the seams for extra durability, and include a durable metal zipper for securing your valuables.
Our zip pouches are available in three different sizes and with two different bottom styles: regular and t-bottom.
Design Details
This large print can be good for decoration of your yoga studio or yoga center or your room were you practice yoga and meditation... more
Care Instructions
Spot clean or dry clean only.
Ships Within
2 - 3 business days
This large print can be good for decoration of your yoga studio or yoga center or your room were you practice yoga and meditation
available at colors please see on my profile in "Large prints and tapestry" gallery
Yogini Shakti
Yogini is an aspect of the Great Mother Tripura. Includes saptamatric or ashtamatric.
There are many of them.
Iconography varies.
Many Yoginis have human female bodies, but the heads could be representing an animalistic life forms, for example, a Buffalo, lioness or antipope.
The Yoginis represent different forms of Shakti, they are companions of Shri Adi Shakti, the Great Mother.
Factually, they are parts of Her.
They dwell in Shakti pithas, in the forests of the temples of Nature. Some of them are worshipped as the elements of Nature.
Some of the Yoginis inhabit the ravines of the mountains or some deserted places.
Their nature can be completely different in character and temper.
Since ancient times, t...
Vrindavan Das attended P.P.Benkov art college and terminated studies in 1987 and obtained an oil painting degree. He traveled to India in 1996 and studied Vedic culture. There he participated a painting project in a Vedic cultural center in New Delhi. He also cooperated with painting projects in Belgium, U.K and U.S.A. He held an exhibition in Dharmasala (Himalayas) and Moscow (Russia). His paintings are in various private collections in the West and in India. His artistic research centers on relationship between human and the divine. He tries to blend western technique with eastern miniature. You can see profile page of Yuliya Glavnaya, student of Vrindavan Das. She presented paintings about buddhist and vedic culture as well as...
$25.00
There are no comments for Yogini #3. Click here to post the first comment.