Vessel of Grace: The Kundika in Hindu Temple Art and Thought Among the many sacred objects rendered in Hindu temple sculpture, the kundika occupies a place of quiet but profound significance. Often mistaken for its more widely recognized counterpart, the kamandalu, the kundika is a distinct ritual water vessel with its own iconographic identity, spiritual symbolism, and devotional purpose. Where the kamandalu is broadly associated with ascetic discipline and renunciation, the kundika carries a more refined, ceremonial character — slender in form, ornamental in finish, and deeply connected to the life-giving power of sacred water. Form and Iconographic Features The kundika is recognizable by its round, full belly, a long and narrow neck, and most distinctively, a small lateral spout known as the nala, positioned on the shoulder or the lower body of the vessel. This spout is not merely functional; it is the defining sculptural marker that separates the kundika from other water vessel...