Natraj idol symbolises the lord of dance and is use in home decors and as gift items.
Nataraja (Tamil: நடராஜர்), (Sanskrit: नटराज, romanized: Naṭarāja) is a portrayal of the Hindu god Shiva as the celestial artist. His move is called Tandavam or Nadanta, contingent upon the setting of the dance.[1][2] The posture and work of art is depicted in numerous Hindu messages, for example, the Anshumadbhed agama and Uttarakamika agama, the move help or icon highlighted in all significant Hindu sanctuaries of Shaivism.[3]
The old style type of the delineation shows up in stone reliefs, as at the Ellora Caverns and the Badami Caverns, by around the sixth century.[4][5] Around the tenth century, it rose in Tamil Nadu in its develop and most popular articulation in Chola bronzes, of different statures normally under four feet,[6] some over.[7] The Nataraja reliefs have been distinguished in notable work of art from numerous pieces of South Asia, in southeast Asia, for example, in Bali, Cambodia, and in focal Asia
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