Budaha Item Number: 3392/6 from the MOA: University of British Columbia
A watercolour painting which depicts a spiritual being seated on a horned, four-legged animal. The being has white skin and is wearing a blue skirt that ends just below the knee. Decorations on both sides of the skirt curl outward at the hip. The bottom of the skirt has a border made up of yellow and brown horizontal stripes. The main body of the skirt is covered in thinner horizontal stripes, and consists of two pieces which come together in the front. The waistband is decorated with a repeating circular pattern. A brown, striped sash is draped diagonally across the being's chest. Additional adornments wrap around its chest and neck, and decorative bands encircle its biceps, wrists, and ankles. The being has half-moon shaped eyes, a small mouth, and stretched earlobes that extend down to its chin. It is wearing a headpiece that comes to a point on both sides. There is a teardrop shaped decoration on top of the headpiece, and side panels extends across the being's shoulders. One of the being's arms is raised by its side, and the other is holding a large, shell-like object. One of the being's legs is bent underneath it, and rests on the head and back of a four-legged animal. The other is stretched toward the floor. The animal is green, with a humped back, long face and legs, and short horns that curve slightly backward. The painting's background is bright yellow, and a rectangular black border surrounds the image. Blue and white oblong rings radiate from behind the being's head and shoulders.
The imagery is possibly associated with ritual healing in Sri Lanka. The set of watercolours (3392/3-34) is said to depict spirits that inhabit planets, or deviyo (minor gods) or rakshas and yakkas (evil or mischievous beings). These beings are often depicted in masked dances and exorcisms.
The collector, Dr. Michael Egan, wrote his doctoral thesis on healing rituals in Sri Lanka. His fieldwork was carried out in the south of Sri Lanka, in the village of Kadurupokuna (Hambantota District), between Sept. 1965 and Nov. 1966.