This feature is mentioned in brahmāṇḍa-purāṇa 3.43.70. (From GRETIL which is a transcription of the Bombay edition of Venkatesa Press)

 brahmāṇḍa-purāṇa 3.43.70

atrinetraḥ śivaḥ sākṣād acaturbāhuracyutaḥ /

acaturvadano brahmā śrīguruḥ parikīrtitaḥ //

"Shri Guru is said to indeed  be  Shiva without three eyes,  Vishnu without four arms and Brahma without four faces".



Harry Spier


On Fri, May 17, 2024 at 8:04 AM Rolf Heinrich Koch via INDOLOGY <indology@list.indology.info> wrote:

One theory resulting from my fieldwork: Remodeling.

According to a Sinhalese mansucript, a handbook for artists in non-standard Sanskrit ślokas, I read e.g. Viṣṇu has to be modelled with two hands for his two attributes. The artist used the existing sculpture depicting an earlier two armed god. He added two arms for the Viṣṇu-Attributes. Now we got Viṣṇu with four arms.
Later, new Viṣṇu-scuptures are modeled with four arms.

Best

Heiner

Am 17.05.2024 um 13:20 schrieb François Voegeli via INDOLOGY:
Dear Members of the List,

A friend recently asked me a rather disconcerting question (for me at least): why do Indian gods have so many arms?

My understanding was that these arms bear attributes of the god (trident, discus, severed head, etc.) to remind the devout of some parts of the god's gest, but I have not seen such explanation in Indian litterature.
What is the Indian literature exactly saying about this quite remarkable feature and where (Purāṇas, Śilpaśāstras, or elsewhere)?

Your input will be very much appreciated.
Thanks in advance.

François Voegeli 

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Dr. Rolf Heinrich Koch
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