Gaja Kundala: Symbolism and Sculptural Canon of the Elephant Earring in Hindu Iconography Among the many forms of ear ornamentation prescribed in the Hindu sculptural tradition, the gaja kundala occupies a distinctive and symbolically charged position. A zoomorphic earring modeled in the likeness of an elephant, it belongs to the broader family of kundalas — the circular or ring-like ear ornaments that Sanskrit texts on iconometry and craftsmanship classify under the wider heading of karna abharana, meaning ornaments of the ear. What sets the gaja kundala apart from disc-based types or the pendulous dola forms is not its manner of suspension but the deliberate, sculptural choice of the elephant as its animating form. Scriptural Grounding in Silpa Shastra The silpa shastra tradition — the body of canonical texts governing sacred art and architecture — gives careful attention to zoomorphic ornaments. The Manasara, one of the foundational texts of this tradition, prescribes that anima...