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Object Name: Lamp
Place of Origin: Rajasthan, India
Date/Era: 19th-20th century
Dimensions: Total Height: 33.00 cm, Total Width: 12.00 cm, Total Depth: 12.50 cm
Medium/Materials: Brass
Credit Line: Fowler Museum at UCLA. Gift of the Pal Family.
Accession Number: X2001.11.22a,b
One of the most common lamp types is the Lakshmi dipa, a lamp in the form of the goddess Lakshmi holding an oil burner in her outstretched arms. As the deity of prosperity, Lakshmi is a focus of domestic worship, most often by women, and her form appears in characteristic regional expressions throughout India. The goddess crowned with a multi-headed snake (naga)-although she follows the form of the Lakshmi lamps-is probably meant to represent a female deity known as a nagini.
Source: Exhibition wall text. Flames of Devotion: Oil Lamps from South and Southeast Asia and the Himalayas.