This horizontal Mahavishnu panel follows the architectural discipline of temple friezes. The composition unfolds in measured rhythm — central iconography balanced by attendant figures, framed beneath carved canopy motifs.
Unlike standalone sculpture, this work is structured as narrative architecture. Each figure occupies a defined spatial register, echoing temple lintel carvings found across South Indian sanctums.
The flanking animal forms reinforce guardianship symbolism, while ornamental scrollwork binds the composition into a continuous visual line.
At 122 cm in length, the panel carries proportional authority without overwhelming space. It is suited for:
The relief depth creates layered shadow rather than surface ornamentation. Presence emerges gradually, not abruptly.
Human Time, Preserved.
Made Slowly. Kept Forever.
Product Overview
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Material: Solid Poola Wood
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Origin: Madhavamala, Andhra Pradesh, India
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Dimensions: Length 122 cm x Width 31 cm
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Thickness: 5 cm
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Weight: Approx. 5 kg
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Form: Horizontal temple narrative relief panel
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Iconography: Mahavishnu with attendant figures under shrine canopy
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Technique: Hand carved medium-to-high relief
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Installation: Wall-mounted or lintel placement
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Price: 51,000
Origin – Madhavamala, Andhra Pradesh
Madhavamala’s carving tradition translates temple architecture into wood with disciplined proportion. Poola wood, native to the region, is selected for its tight grain and ability to hold sustained detailing without fracture.
Panels of this format historically functioned as architectural elements — placed above doorways or within shrine interiors — forming structural continuity between space and devotion.
This work continues that lineage.
Craft and Process
The carving begins with a single seasoned slab of Poola wood selected for grain uniformity.
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The top canopy line is established to determine flow.
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The central Vishnu form is blocked and balanced within the horizontal axis.
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Attendant figures are shaped symmetrically to maintain structural equilibrium.
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Animal guardians are carved at the edges to anchor the composition.
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Border details are refined last to unify the frieze.
All visible forms are carved by hand. No applied ornamentation is attached afterward.
Subtle tool rhythm remains in recessed areas, preserving the evidence of measured carving rather than machine uniformity.