In this striking composition, Jagruti Sonawane invokes the visual language of Tibetan and Himalayan wrathful deities yet disrupts it through poetic hybridity. A fierce divine visage—crowned with symbolic skulls, eyes ablaze with alert consciousness—emerges not as a figure of terror but as an embodiment of protective energy. Instead of a conventional body, the form fuses with monumental crab claws, their vivid orange surface rendered with tactile precision, suggesting both vulnerability and strength. Suspended against a misted, mountainous landscape, the being feels at once mythic and deeply psychological. The work meditates on the paradox that within ferocity lies compassion; within fear lies the potential for clarity. Sonawane reframes the traditional “wrathful” guardian not as an emblem of violence but as an allegory for inner courage—an image of the mind confronting its own turbulence in order to arrive at stillness.
