Logun Edé watercolour painting
$60.00 – $210.00
Print of Watercolour painting of Iansa, prayed and sung over while being painted by Uruguayan artist Josefina Grunwaldt.
Logun Edé – Orisha of Hunting, Fishing and Plenty
He is considered one of the most beautiful and vain male orixás. It couldn’t be less: he is the son of Orisha and Oxum, the goddess of love .
From Oxum, he inherited the sweet way and cunning. From Oxossi, strength and hunting spirit. For this reason, they say that Logun Edé brings in its characteristics both female and male expressions at the same time.
According to legend, it is because his life was divided into two periods in the year:
For six months he accompanied his father Oxóssi into the woods, where he learned about hunting, developing agility and the axé of abundance.
In the other six months, he lives with his mother Oxum in the freshwater rivers, learning about fishing and delicacy.
He is cited as a hunter brave as a leopard, ruler of hunting, fishing, progress and plenty. He takes progress, abundance, prosperity, victories and achievements in the lives of those who worship him with faith and from the heart, with good character.
In Umbanda and Candomblé, Logun Edé is an excellent hunter and fisherman. Whether in freshwater or on land, he acts patiently and wisely to achieve what he desires.
Logunede
Logunede, the Orixa of beauty
Logunede he has the gift of healing
He is a hunter who knows the jungle
He is the water rolling down the waterfall
He is the male in each female
He is the female in each male
Logunede, I find myself in your mystery
He is the union of the vine with the queen
He is vision, shining on my face
He is the little caboclo of Oxossi and Oxum
Brings the medicine and goes healing one by one
He is the sun, he is the moon
Logunede, life continues in you
He is the mystery of the circle
The two sides of the dance
Logunede is in the one and the other side
*When buying 2 or 3 artwork, please specify on the checkout Order Notes the artwork you want.
The Orixás are different manifestations of creation, of the divine forces of nature. The Yoruba people come from Africa, and were brought as slaves to Brazil. In Brazil, their culture and religion developed into the spiritual practice of Candomblé, from which later Umbanda emerges. They held nature as their high power, understanding the necessity to respect and honor the sacred relationship between nature’s elements and human beings. As so each orixá represents a certain aspect of nature, with which we can communicate, learn from and ask for guidance and help.
Size | A3, 420x297mm, A3, 420x297mm x2 images, A3, 420x297mm x3 images, A4, 297x210mm, A4, 297x210mm x2 images, A4, 297x210mm x3 images |
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