Feature Articles
Author: Vidya Dehejia
Keywords: Art History, India, Philosophy, Religion, South Asia, World History
How to Cite: Dehejia, V. (1996) “Enduring Stereotypes About South Asia: All Indian Art Is Religious”, Education About Asia. 1(1). doi: https://doi.org/10.65959/eaa.8
But this is where we need to insert a caveat. "All the art that has come down to us" is art that was consolidated in the medium of solid, long-lasting stone. This was either the immovable rock of a mountainside or structures built by piling large, solid blocks of stone one upon the other. For reasons not clear to us, it was the Buddhists who first adopted stone construction, while the Hindus followed suit 500 years later. But what of building with less permanent materials? If we consider the smaller towns of India, or indeed the many small towns of middle America, we would find that even today, stone is not the standard medium of construction for homes, shops, and the like. On the other hand, the town's sacred center, be it temple or church, is likely to be built of stone. An archaeologist of the future, finding only the stone monuments standing above ground, might think that these American towns too believed only in sacred art!
In ancient India, however, this entire process was carried one giant step further. The Chandella monarchs, kings Yasovarman and Dhanga, were responsible for erecting the magnificent Lakshmana and Vishvantatha temples at Khajuraho. These elegant stone temples consist of a series of halls that culminate the sweeping curve of the shrine tower, and the temple walls are decorated with sculpted stone images and carved designs. We might well imagine that the monarchs would have built for themselves an equally splendid stone palace as a testimony to their earthly grandeur. But this was not the case. In fact, the site of Khajuraho provides an interesting testing ground for this scenario. As the capital of the Chandella rulers of central India between the 9th and 13th centuries, the site once housed a large group of temples along the shores of an artificial lake; today some twenty-five temples stand intact while ruins of many more may be traced. But there is not a trace of the royal center. That it existed and that it was grand is quite certain; literary references in Chandella plays speak of musical performances on the palace grounds. Grand as it may have been, it would seem that the royal center was built of brick and wood; its decoration must have consisted of wood and clay sculptures and wall paintings. All of these have perished in the hot and humid climate of India; the stone temples alone have survived.
A parallel scenario is presented by the Chola capital of Tanjore. The famous Tanjore temple, often referred to as the Great temple, the Brihadesvara, stands on the elevated site. This monumental granite temple reaches a height of 212 feet, and its walls are covered with greater than life-sized carvings of the gods and goddesses. Two walls, each with a grand gateway giving access, enclose the temple, and a broad moat surrounds the entire complex (photo to left). The Chola emperor Rajaraja, or "king of kings," constructed the temple in the early years of the 11th century, after having consolidated his power across all of south India and having annexed Sri Lanka as a province of his empire. His title, "king of kings," speaks volumes of the pride in his achievement, and he constructed the temple to proclaim his victory and glory. But did he build only a stone temple and not an equally grand palace? He did indeed build himself a palace which he located immediately beside the temple, but the palace was built of brick and today it is nonexistent. If one follows the moat around the temple, one would see that it encloses a large area of what seems to be fallow ground; this area once housed the prick palace of Rajaraja.
While excavations have not been undertaken at Tanjore. a serious of trenches have been sunk at the site of Gangaikonda-cholapuram, capital of Rajaraja's son Rajendra. Here, too, Rajendra's stone temple stands proudly with its tower reaching skyward, while nothing remains of his palace. The excavations have revealed foundations of the brick palace; only the stone at the palace site consists of granite bases intended to provide support for wooden pillars. A poet at the Chola court has left us this description of the grandeur of the royal area of Gangaikonda-cholapuram.
Palace entrance, mansions, avenues,
temples, pavilions, balconies,
ornamental gateways,
windows, verandahs, upper stories,
dancing halls and platforms,
were filled with palace women,
with crowds of people
so that the very landscape around
was made visible to the eye.1
But all this was of brick and wood construction and has not stood the test of time. It requires quite a feat of imagination to conjure up the ancient glory of the palace from the rudimentary character of the excavated remains.
This juxtaposition of brick and stone architecture, and the selective use of stone, tells us a great deal about the ancient Indian attitude towards the sacred and secular. However magnificently a palace stood, the kinds were content to treat it as a relatively ephemeral structure that could be constructed of perishable material. But the temple, as the house of the gods, was designed to last for future generations; it was built of long-lasting stone and adorned with stone sculpted images and stone narrative reliefs.
It is correct, then, to state that all the ancient pre-Islamic art that has come down to us in the medium of stone is indeed sacred in nature. Monuments were dedicated to the Hindu, Buddhist or Jain faiths, and the cultures that decorated them were created specifically to adorn these sacred structures. But does that necessarily imply that all the sculpture and painting decorating a sacred structure is religious in character? We shall see that it is not. And herein lies another half-truth about the religious nature of Indian art.
The walls of the temples at Alampur in the Andhra region of southern India are instructive in this context. (I have intentionally avoided focusing this discussion on the Khajuraho temples in central India or the Orissan temples, since both these are famed for their erotic, secular imagery.) The rear wall of the Svarga Brahma temple (photo above) has three famed niches, each of which houses an image of a deity. The large central recessed niche displays an image of Vishnu as Trivikrama, a gigantic form he assumed in his fifth incarnation. The smaller niches to the left and right contain smaller images of Vishnu. Sacred imagery is what one would expect on the walls of a temple which is, after all, a sacred structure. But what about the images that flank these niches? We see five sets of amorous couples who are clearly not sacred in character. As we consider the distribution of images on this temple wall, we realize that there are three images of the gods and five amorous couples. Why do images of sensuous females adorn Buddhist stupas and Hindu and Jain temples? How do we explain gods sharing temple walls with bracing couples? Why this extraordinary intermingling of sacred and secular?
Stella Kramrisch's inspired words in her 1954 book on Indian art are worth repeating here. "The art of India is neither religious nor secular," she wrote, "for the consistent fabric of Indian life was never rent by the Western dichotomy of religious belief and worldly practice."2
Since Kramrisch did not elaborate, we need to seek further explanations here. In ancient India, the goals in life were four-fold: dharma or righteousness; artha or wealth, which was obtained by the pursuit of a profession; kama or love, both familial and sexual, which was essential for happy living; and moksha or spiritual salvation. It was not a question of following one or the other; rather, every individual was asked to strive after all four. Even one who wished to seek only salvation was apprised of his or her duty to seek the other three goals before embarking on the quest for salvation. A holistic approach to life was recommended, and it is in this context that we may start to understand the figural imagery on temple walls. While a temple may be intended primarily to help individuals towards the final goal of salvation, images depicting the other three goals of life had a legitimate place on the structure. Images suggestive of the joy of lobe, or those depicting various professions, had as much right to be portrayed on a temple as images of deities. We should remember that those aiming for vanaprastha, or the life of a forest renunciant, were required to experience the brahmacharya phase of student life, and then the grahstha stage of the married householder before renouncing these in later life. It is in this context that we may best understand the varied nature of the imagery found on temple walls.
And yet, there is surely more to it than this. After all, images of sensuous women and of couples occur very prominently o walls of temples and monastic Buddhist chapels. And the emphasis on rounded breasts, narrow waists, and broad hips is very pronounced. A second major explanation for such imagery lies in the belief that these were auspicious figures that brought fortune to a monument. The roots of this idea lay in the great significance given to the concept of fertility. Women and the couple were both clearly associated with fertility which, in return, implied growth, abundance, and prosperity. This set of associations led to women and the couple becoming emblems of the auspicious. It was believed that in some magical manner, women and couples transferred their auspiciousness to the monument on which they were placed. If it was a Buddhist chapel, the monastic establishment would be blessed with good fortune; if it was a temple, the shrine would prosper; if it was the palace wall, the monarch would thrive. When artists were given specific religious or mythological themes to carve, they followed instructions; when left to themselves to complete the decoration of a wall, a pillar, a verandah, they inserted imagery that they knew to be of auspicious significance. Women and couples were high on this list, which included a third motif - lush, overflowing foliage which was an obvious emblem of fertility.
the Rasikapriya, the Sat Sai, and the Barahmāsa. In several paintings of these secular texts, the hero is painted blue and often given the yellow robe and peacock plume or crown associated with Krishna (Illustration 1). This conflation of a human hero or nāyaka with divine Krishna is seen routinely in the paintings produced in the Rajput courts. But the presence of a blue image in the miniatures was not intended to signal to the viewers that the sext was sacred in character. In fact, several such secular paintings featuring Krishna carry verses from their secular texts immediately above the illustration, clarifying their content. The artist just did not consider it strange to use Krishna as the archetypal hero. Since Krishna was the divine lover par excellence, the painters seem to have felt it appropriate to use his figure to illustrate a secular love poem dealing with heroes (nāyakas) and heroines (nāyikās). Admittedly, this would never have happened in a Christian context, but then the boundaries between sacred and secular were never sharply drawn in India.
It is intriguing to note that when we turn to folk religion and art, we find that artists take liberties with sacred iconography. In the Bastar tribular region of central India, for instance, figures of deities are extremely difficult to identify with any degree of certainty. Artists produce images according to visions received in dreams, and their dream visions are not consistent from one year to the next. Apart from an occasional figure of major importance, such as the goddess Danteshvari who always rides upon an elephant, there is no set iconography. Images of Budhimātā or Maulimātā are depicted holding different objects depending upon the artist who produced the image. The only way to identify most deities is to ask the artist the identity of the figure produced. To a degree, images are used interchangeably, so that bronzes may often be identified only as "standing goddess" or "two goddesses."
Other tribal groups like the Kondh of Orissa produce "deities," but they also create bronzes that include a range of animals and genre pieces depicting figures relaxing on beds or farmers ploughing with oxen. This latter group does not seem to have held sacred significance. Several are given as part of a bride's dowry and are spoken of by their owners as "valuable bronzes" - a small bronze costs as much as 22 lbs. of rice. The notion that all Indian art is religious is so strongly ingrained that it has taken many years to concede that certain categories of Kondh bronzes may, in fact, be of secular rather than sacred import. As we have seen, however, the dichotomy between the sacred and the secular is irrelevant in India; the two are inextricably linked, both in socio-religious practice and in India's art.