"Vishvarupa, Do You Know?"
Chromolithograph of a painting by Raja Ravi Varna Ravi Varmâ (Kilimanoor, Kerala in India, April 29, 1848 - Kilimanoor, October 2, 1906) is an Indian painter who achieved great fame in particular by illustrating scenes from the epics of the Mahabharata and the Ramayana Maha means "great or total + Bhârata means man and is the real name of 'India (India is the name given by the colonists) ... I did not know that ... A sublime work, the Mahâbhârata is a gigantic epic made up of no less than 81,936 stanzas. Gigantic in its size but also in its beauty and wisdom, the Mahâbhârata is a sacred book of Hinduism. Which I will spare you the enumeration. Emerging from the web of divinities and their turpitudes, the studio of Ravi Daya Vijada in Ghatkoper published this lithograph in 1914. This proof in perfect condition comes from what is called "studio background". It is in new condition. The myth of Vishvarupa appears in the Bhagavad-Gita to Arjuna as a manifestation of Vishnu in the guise of Krishna4: "I see you with arms, chests, faces and eyes without number, with an absolutely infinite form. Without end, without middle, without beginning, thus I see you, universal Lord, universal form"