Ardha Chandra Mudra — The Half Moon Gesture in Hindu Sculpture and Sacred Tradition Among the many sacred hand gestures that animate Hindu sculpture, the Ardha Chandra Mudra stands apart for its elegance and expressive clarity. The name itself derives from Sanskrit — ardha meaning half, and chandra meaning moon — together evoking the luminous crescent that this gesture so precisely resembles. The left hand typically performs this mudra: the thumb is extended outward while the index, middle, ring, and little fingers are held upright and close together, their unified silhouette tracing the clean arc of a half-moon. The fingers maintain a firm yet controlled extension, neither rigid nor slack, embodying a quality of poised tension that is central to its aesthetic and spiritual character. Roots in Nritta and the Sculptural Tradition The Ardha Chandra Mudra belongs firmly to the world of nritta — the pure, expressive dimension of classical Indian dance — and its influence on Hindu sculp...