Bodhisattva with donors and/or devotees

Part of a relief showing a bodhisattva with donors and/or devotees. Both base and cornice are plain. The bodhisattva, originally in the middle of the relief, is seating in the European fashion on a throne with a canopy, of which only the left post is preserved. Both hands are chipped. The left one was in abhayamudrā, and the right one is resting on the knee. He wears an uttarīya exposing the torso and a paridhāna, a skull-cap turban with a vertical diadem, a long necklace and earrings. On the left are three standing devotees, the first two turning to the bodhisattva, and the last one is shown frontal. The first figure has joined hands. The second figure possibly held an object in the left hand, now worn, while the right is chipped. The third figure bears a flower in the right hand, while the left is resting on his waist. All three wear a long dhotī and uttarīya, and a long necklace. They have long, flowing hair, that of the first two figures being pulled up in a frontal coil.