The Lord Vishwakarma

According to Hindu tradition, all the arts and crafts are of divine origin, having being 
revealed and handed down to certain individuals by “the miraculous genius” (Zimmer, 
1962, p.3) Lord Visvakarma—the creative archetypal power. The Primordial Creator 
and Supreme Patron of Arts, Crafts, Science and Creativity is Lord Visvakarma
(Sharma, 1989). He is at once the Great Architect of the Universe, Spirit of the Creative 
Process, and a symbol of Total Centered Consciousness. He is also known as Vis-
vakarmaya: Creative Power of the Whole Universe. The obvious meaning of the word 
Visvakarman is “all-maker” (visva means ‘all’ and karman means ‘maker’) Visvakarma
the “All Creating” thought to be the Vulcan of the Greeks and Romans (Wilkins, 1882), 
appears as an independent Hindu deity as early as last book of Rig-Veda. Later in the 
Brahmans he is “expressly identified with the creator Prajapati” (Hastings, 1960, III, 
606,b). As the highest of the gods, he is synonymous with Brahma of the Hindu trinity, 
said to have originated in the primeval waters, as the Golden Germ, the World Womb-
Egg (Hiranyagarbha) containing all the other gods in the world. Like Brahma, Vis-
vakarma, the Creator, is one of the many names which may be applied to almost any of 
the gods at the will of the worshipper. Wise and mighty in act, Visvakarma orders all 
things, and men desire the attainment of good in the world where “he, the One Being, 
dwells beyond the seven Rishis” (sages). He is the maker of the region Sutala, whereby 
his will, as in the greek Elysion, “neither mental nor bodily pains, nor fatigue, nor wea-
riness, nor discomfiture, nor diseases afflict the inhabitance” (in Cox, 1870 p.166). In 
the two hymns in the Rig-Veda he is described as “the one all-seeing god, who, when 
producing heaven and earth, blows them forth (or shapes them) with his arms and 
wings; the father, generator, disposer, who knows all worlds, gives the gods their 
names, and is beyond the comprehension of mortals.” In the Mahabharata I.2592, con-
sequent on the development made by the Hindus in the arts of civilization, Visvakarma
is described as “the Lord of the arts, executor of the thousand handicrafts, the carpenter 
of the gods, the fashioner of all ornaments, the most eminent of artisans on whose craft 
men subsist and whom, as a great and immortal god, they continually worship.” He re-
vealed the fourth Upaveda (class of writings subordinate to the Vedas) in various trea-
tises on sixty-four mechanical arts, for the improvement of such as exercise them; and 
he is inspector of all manual labors and mechanical arts. His name is of some celebrity 
in mythological legends. Visvakarma, the Maker of All, is said to have built the homes 
of Brahma and Yama, the underwater palace of Varuna, the celestial Chariot, Pushpaka and the first claypot or kalasa which was used to collect the amrit, the ambrosia that 
emerged at the time of the churning of the ocean. In Visvakarma’s name, a number of 
manuals on architecture and sculpture, such as the Visvakarma prakasha, have been 
written and compiled from memory by succeeding generation of artists. The Chandella 
inscription of Dhangadeva found at Khajuraho records the construction of a Siva temple 
which was built by the architect Chhichchha who was “as versatile as Visvakarma” in 
knowledge. Even in the historical inscriptions the reference to Visvakarma building the 
temples of Khajuraho resounds in metaphors similar to that of the Shivpurana, though it 
must be remembered that the association of artists with Visvakarma, the divine architect 
was popular at that time (Punja, 1992 p. 133). 
In the contemporary pantheon of Hinduism, Brahama as Lord Visvakarma who was ini-
tially worshipped on the same level as the other two of the triad, evolved in the course 
of centuries into a somewhat unilateral and, therefore, lesser god and for all practical 
purposes stands on a somewhat lower level than the two other members of the triad, and 
his worshippers have become steadily fewer in number. The goddess Saraswati, also 
said to possess creative power of imagination and invention is generally regarded 
throughout India as his Shakti or female counterpart. Images of Brahma are placed in 
the temples of other gods but he has not many temples, or rites, exclusively dedicated to 
him.
Considered to be the son of the Vasuprabhasa and his wife, Yogasiddha, according to 
one tradition, Visvakarma had five faces, ten hands and from each of the face he begot a 
son. Like their father, each of the sons was extraordinarily talented and versatile in all 
fields and because of their stature, they were also awarded the title of Maharishi (great 
sage or saint) (Sharma, 1989). Each of the five sons gave rise to a major artistic lineage, 
and theoretically any artist can trace his mythical descent to one of them. The five sons 
of Visvakarma are claimed to have been the first blacksmith, the first carpenter, the first 
founder, the first mason, the first goldsmith, variously and the succeeding generation of 
the craftsmen are supposed to be their progeny. Roberts (1909, p.11) quotes a passage 
from the Vedas: 
Manu was a blacksmith and author of the Rig Veda. Maya was a carpenter 
and author of Yajur Veda. Twashtak was a brass caster and author of 
Sama Veda. Shilpi was a mason-architect and author of the Atharvana 
Veda. And Vishvagna was a goldsmith and author of the Pranava Veda.
Visvakarma represents an active creative power, and for this reason he is often depicted 
in red—the color red being related to creative force, passion and activity in ancient 
texts. According to another tradition as Shukla (1957, p. 184) explains : “He has four 
heads in reference to the four quarters of his yajna or sacrifice, is full of Kamana or de-
sire and creation: ‘I shall be many’ (sodkamayat aha bahusya prajayeyam)” declared 
the god of creativity. Analysis of some myths around Panchabrahma (Visvakarma) de-
scribing his various creative powers and traits is available in Singh (1968). 
No images of this god are now made, but since all Visvakarma artisans have ritualized 
their tools, each artisan worship them and one day in the year is specially set apart for 
this purpose. “Visvakarma becomes the symbol of Hindu creativity and his anniversary 
the regeneration of a lost glory” (Kumar, 1988, p.207). The carpenter bows down to his 
hammer, saw, etc.; the student to his books; the bricklayer to his trowel; the peasant to his plough; the potter his wheel; the blacksmith his hammer and bellows; and the 
weaver his shuttle; the clerk his pen. Soldiers and warlike tribes worship their weapons. 
The Indian crafts man, as Mulk Raj Anand (1957) has noticed, was well versed in the 
subtleties of the higher religion of philosophy, and believing in a Supreme God brought 
his faith in a philosophically defined Divinity and his inheritance of myth to bear upon 
the sacred task of rendering explicit the implications of the Cosmic Life. In order to sus-
tain his vocation on the secure foundations of religion and to give it an exalted place in 
the scheme of Hindu social life, he traced his descent of his caste from Visvakarma. The 
Visvakarmas who may be called Silpa Brahmans or Visvabrahmans are “the reflected 
forms of Visvakarman”(Gnanananda, 1981, p.10). They repeat in the world the works 
of their great mythological ancestor. Every artist or poet has a share in the divine artistic 
power and intuition (Pratibha), and is himself a human representative of the Divine Ar-
chitect (Visvakarma), the creator (Brahma, Prajapati) (Baumer, 1985). The same con-
tention is reflected in Rabindranath Tagore (1988, p.30) who quotes the Upanishad: 
“This deity who is manifesting himself in the activities of the universe always dwells in 
the heart of man as the supreme soul. Those who realize him through the immediate 
perception of the heart attain immortality.” In the Visvakarma ideology, Lord Vis-
vakarman is an image of the cosmos composed of a male and female constituent part. 
The Visvakarma craftsman, being His worldly counterpart, is thus also an image of the 
cosmos. Subsequent to this idea, the crafts are seen as a transcendent act of destruction 
and creation similar to that process of the heavenly Visvakarman” (Brouwer, 1995, 
p.33). Maduro (1976) who did, with psychoanalytic expertise and anthropological per-
spective, a penetrating study of the nature and genesis of creativity in the painters of 
Nathdwara, in Rajasthan, India, through the use of life histories, dreams, projective tests 
and other sources of psychological data, found that at his best, the artist identifies with 
and internalizes the psychic functions and values associated with the personality of
Lord Visvakarma, his mythical ancestor from whom artistic unity, diversity and creative 
energy are derived. “During the ritual of artistic creation, the artist says he feels the liv-
ing presence of the god, and he experiences himself in his work as if he were an instru-
ment of divine communication between the archetypal forces at work in him and the 
needs and values of his collectivity. He accepts the mythical paradigm in which the an-
cestor god first taught the artists how to plan and create. This acceptance lends certainty 
and psychological coherence to his everyday life and work by explaining the origins of 
what is known to exist. Man does now what the gods did originally. Artists create now 
as they were taught to in primordial, sacred time” (Maduro, 1976, p.74). Almost similar 
findings were obtained in the study (Brouwer, 1991, 1995) restricted to those groups of 
artisans in Karnataka state in India who present themselves to the outside world as the 
Visvakarma caste. This is reflected in the process which underlies creativity among the 
Visvakarmas, the artisans. The process of creativity for those artisans moves between 
the two poles of integration and disintegration. The stage of transformation of substance 
shows an interaction accompanied by the sound of the hammer (dammaru), thus activat-
ing the cyclical rhythm of the cosmos. The Visvakarma artisan, who has the knowledge 
of the intrinsic coherence of the universe, realizes this. Because of his knowledge, he 
himself has to be identified with the cosmos. In the rituals connected with the sacrifice, 
the Visvakarma artisan is seen as repeating the sacrifice of his mythological ancestor, 
Visvakarma. He himself is the Vishvakarma of the universe that is his workshop, while 
Visvakarma is invoked in the kalasas (ornamental water-vessel; jar; pitcher; vase) used 
in the rituals. In the workshop, the cosmic drama of integration and disintegration takes place, and at its center stands the Visvakarma as sacrificer and ritualist. The Vis-
vakarma becomes the universe himself. In the world view of the Visvakarmas, the two 
poles of cosmic life are Kali (goddess shakti) and Siva. The result of the drama is a 
product which is a symbolic representation of the world (Brouwer, 1995, pp. 173–173). 
During a phase of the creative process, the Nathdwara artists remove themselves sym-
bolically from the normal world by burning incense to Visvakarma, praying for inspira-
tion from his patron (Ishta Deva), and assumes a posture conducive to the reception of 
ideas and impulses from within. 
The Lord’s assertion: ‘I shall be many,’ we understand, is of great psychic significance 
to the creative artists of Nathdwara, who have cited to Maduro folk versions of this pas-
sage. The implications are profound and refer to the multifaceted nature of Visvakarma
as an important living self symbol of the creative unconscious mind. The god’s words 
imply that in oneness and unity there is yet endless diversity, duality, nuances, and 
artistic variation. Rabindranath Tagore (1988, p.31) has expressed it more philosoph
cally: 
i-
He is Visvakarma; that is, in a multiplicity of forms and forces lies his 
outward manifestation in nature; but his inner manifestation in our soul is 
that which exists in unity. Our pursuit of truth in the domain of nature 
therefore is through analysis and the gradual methods of science, but our 
apprehension of truth in our soul is immediate and through direct intuition. 
We cannot attain the supreme soul by successive additions of knowledge 
acquired bit by bit even through all eternity, because he is one, he is not 
made up of parts; we can only know him as heart of our hearts and soul of 
our soul; we can only know him in the love and joy we feel when we give 
up our self and stand before him face to face.

Artists have generally talked at length about the significance of Visvakarma. We are 
told the more creative a painter is, the more he says he feels ordained to live out person-
ally the myth of Visvakarma. Further, “Indian folk culture provides Visvakarma, a posi-
tive ego ideal which “captures” a projection of the father archetype and is then intro-
jected (or, in a sense, reintrojected). This introjection corresponds to the ritual identifi-
cation with the creative power of the deity and provides one of the many culturally pat-
terned (activated) intrapsychic complexes through which the creative instinct may be 
filtered" (p.137). Mulk Raj Anand (1957, p.94–95) whose understanding of Indian arts 
is deep and insightful has made a perceptive observation: 
Like most other myths consciously invented to make abstruse philosophi-
cal theories interesting and easily intelligible to those for whom, as I have 
constantly said, it is much easier to love than to know, this myth has very 
far-reaching consequences. The Indian craftsmen, whether the most so-
phisticated priest-artists or simple manual workers, were enabled by this 
picturesque story to comprehend that since the Supreme God in the form
of Visvakarma, the artist-craftsman of heaven, was the founder of the arts 
and bequeathed His knowledge to His first five human artisan-sons (the 
ancestors of all succeeding craftsmen). Divine skill had been preserved in-
tact in their families and cast through the laws of heredity. And the fact 
that the Supreme God was generally understood not only to be the first 
practitioner of the crafts, but also the ideal practitioner, the ideal crafts man, crystallizing Absolute Beauty, Absolute Rhythm, Absolute Propor-
tion in Himself and in His work, supplied the artisans a model to live up 
to, and raised the pursuit of their art above the eccentricity of particular 
individual and limited ideas of beauty to an acknowledged universal ideal 
of perfection which is philosophically and aesthetically one of the broad-
est and the most comprehensive view of order that the human mind in all 
countries and among all nations has been able to evolve and formulate 
when strained to its utmost resources. With all the simplicity of his faith 
the Indian artisan sought thus, through the Divine Visvakarma, to gain, if 
he could, one little glimpse of the inmost essence of all things, he strove to 
suggest some vaguest hints of Reality, so that he himself and yearning 
humanity might in some small way be helped to overcome the obstacles 
presented by their finitude in the way of the realization of the Infinite. 
In another context, I (Raina, 1996) have pleaded that within the amazing diversity and 
cultural pluralism that characterizes our contemporary societies, where Visvakarma
manifests himself in various activity in a multiplicity of forms and forces, it becomes 
imperative to adopt a perspective which frees us from remaining chained to a single sta-
tion point and help erase the boundaries rather than to stress them. This has definite im-
plications for the consciousness we may adopt as creativity researchers to explore cul-
tural and sub-cultural perspectives which underlie myths and metaphors as they relate to 
theories of creativity. That will make our pilgrimage in search of Lord Visvakarma
really meaningful and rewarding.

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