The Body Adorned

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The Body Adorned

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The

Body

Adorned Dissolving Boundaries Between Sacred and Profane in India’s Art

Vidya Dehejia

Mapin Edn

Mapin Publishing

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First published in 2009 in India by Mapin Publishing 10B Vidyanagar Society I Usmanpura, Ahmedabad 380014 T: 91 79 2754 5390/91 | F: 2754 5392 E: mapin@mapinpub.com | www.mapinpub.com Simultaneously published in 2009 in the United States of America by Columbia University Press Publishers Since 1893 New York Chichester, West Sussex Copyright © 2009 Columbia University Press All rights reserved ISBN: 978-81-89995-04-1 Designed by Revanta Sarabhai / Mapin Design Studio Produced for Columbia University Press by Mapin Publishing The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standards for Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials. Printed in Singapore c 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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CONTENTS

List of Illustrations Preface and Acknowledgments 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

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The Body as Leitmotif The Idealized Body and Ornament The Sensuous Within Sacred Boundaries To the Divine Through Beauty Inserting the Gods into the World of Men: Rajput Painted Manuscripts Afterword. The Body Revealed and Concealed: Issues of Intention and Perception

1 24 75 112

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Notes Bibliography Index

209 224 234

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ILLUSTRATIONS

1. God Shiva, Chola bronze, Tiruvenkadu temple, Tamil Nadu, ca. 1011 2. Dancer, stone, possibly Jamsot, Uttar Pradesh, twelfth century 3. Chowri-bearer (front view), sandstone, Didarganj, ca. second century 4. Chowri-bearer (rear view), sandstone, Didarganj, ca. second century 5. Women, sandstone, Vamana temple, Khajuraho, Madhya Pradesh, ca. 1000 6. Chanda yakshi, sandstone, Bharhut stupa, Uttar Pradesh, ca. 100 b.c.e. 7. Queen, granite, Nageshvara temple, Kumbakonam, Tamil Nadu, ninth century 8. Queen Maya, painted mural, Vihara 2, Ajanta caves, Maharashtra, fifth century 9. Future Buddha Maitreya, copper alloy with gilding and color, Nepal, ninth to tenth century 10. Dvarapala, sandstone, north gateway, Sanchi stupa, Madhya Pradesh, first century b.c.e. 11. Embracing couple, sandstone, Lakshmana temple, Khajuraho, Madhya Pradesh, ca. 954 12. Portrait coins of Samudragupta, gold, ca. 355–376 13. King Narasimhadeva as an archer, chlorite, Konarak temple, Orissa 14. King Narasimhadeva on a swing, chlorite, Konarak temple, Orissa 15. Future Buddha Maitreya, sandstone, Ahicchhattra, Uttar Pradesh, first century 16. Donor couple (probably Minister Tejahpala and his wife), marble, Luna Vasahi temple, Mount Abu, thirteenth century 17. King Prithivideva and Queen Kelachchadevi, marble, Rajasthan, 1183 18. Wall of Lingaraja temple, sandstone, Bhubaneshvar, Orissa, eleventh century 19. Buddhist stupa, Sanchi, Madhya Pradesh, first century b.c.e. 20. “First pillar,” sandstone, Bharhut stupa, Madhya Pradesh, ca. 100 b.c.e. 21. Chanda yakshi, sandstone, Bharhut stupa, Madhya Pradesh, ca. 100 b.c.e. 22. Kubera yaksha, sandstone, Bharhut stupa, Madhya Pradesh, ca. 100 b.c.e. 23. Sirima devata, sandstone, Bharhut stupa, Madhya Pradesh, ca. 100 b.c.e. 24. Chulakoka devata, sandstone, Bharhut stupa, Madhya Pradesh, ca. 100 b.c.e. 25. Yakshi bracket, sandstone, east gateway, Sanchi stupa, Madhya Pradesh, first century b.c.e. 26. Woman with attendants, ivory, Pompeii, first century b.c.e. 27. Woman on image-pillar, sandstone, Bhuteshvara stupa, Mathura, first to second century 28. Queen Maya and the Buddha’s miraculous birth, limestone, Amaravati, Andhra Pradesh, second century 29. Mithunas, Deccan trap rock, chaitya-hall veranda, Karle, Maharashtra, first century

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Illustrations

30. Ayaka “cornice” slab, limestone, Nagarjunakonda, Andhra Pradesh, third to fourth century 98 31. Rear wall of Vaital Deul temple, with central deity-niche featuring Shiva as Ardhanari and flanking niches with women, sandstone, Bhubaneshvar, eighth century 100 32. Vishnu as Varaha, sandstone, third terrace, Queen’s Stepwell, Patan, Gujarat, ca. 1085 105 33. Vishnu as Kalki, sandstone, third terrace, Queen’s Stepwell, Patan, Gujarat, ca. 1085 105 34. Flutist bracket, marble, Vimala Vasahi temple, Mount Abu, Rajasthan, twelfth century 108 35. Ceiling of ranga-mandapa, with maha-vidyas, marble, Luna Vasahi temple, Mount Abu, Rajasthan, thirteenth century 109 36. Shiva as Nataraja, Chola bronze, Tamil Nadu, ca. 990 115 37. Shiva as Tri-pura-vijaya, Chola bronze, Tamil Nadu, ca. 950–960 117 38. Shiva as Bhikshatana, Chola bronze, Tiruvenkadu temple, Tamil Nadu, ca. 1040 120 39. Shiva as the vina-playing Enchanting Mendicant, Chola bronze, Valampuram temple, Tamil Nadu, ca. 1178 122 40. Two adoring women from a Bhikshatana group, granite, Darasuram temple, Tamil Nadu, twelfth century 124 41. Shiva as Ardha-nari, Chola bronze, Tiruvenkadu temple, Tamil Nadu, ca. 1040 126 42. Goddess Uma, Chola bronze, Tamil Nadu, ca. 1012 128 43. Durga victorious over Mahisha, sandstone, Ambika-mata temple, Jagat, Rajasthan, ca. 960 130 44. Durga victorious over Mahisha, sandstone, Khiching temple, Orissa, tenth to eleventh century 131 45. Durga fighting Mahisha, granite, Mahishamardini cave, Mamallapuram, Tamil Nadu, seventh century 132 46. Kali, bronze, Nepal, ninth to tenth century 134 47. Vishnu, granite, Chola temple, Pullamangai, Tamil Nadu, ca. 918 139 48. Shiva and Parvati, schist, Orissa, twelfth to thirteenth century 145 49. Shiva and Parvati, granite, Kilaiyur temple, Tamil Nadu, ninth to tenth century 146 50. Vishnu and Lakshmi, sandstone, Parshvanatha temple, Khajuraho, Madhya Pradesh, ca. 955 152 51. Buddhist goddess Tara, Deccan trap rock, cave 7, Aurangabad, Maharashtra, seventh century 156 52. Maha-vidya Mahamanasi on ceiling panel, marble, Luna Vasahi temple, Mount Abu, Rajasthan, thirteenth century 158 53. Shatha-nayaka, watercolor on paper with applied beetles’ wings, Rasa-manjari by Master of the Early Rasa-manjari (Kripal of Nurpur?), Basohli, 1660–1670 170 54. Vaishika-nayaka, watercolor on paper with applied beetles’ wings, Rasa-manjari by Master of the Early Rasa-manjari (Kripal of Nurpur?), Basohli, 1660–1670 171

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55. Madhya-abhisarika-nayika, watercolor on paper with applied beetles’ wings, Rasamanjari by Master of the Early Rasa-manjari (Kripal of Nurpur?), Basohli, 1660–1670 172 56. Madhya-abhisarika-nayika, watercolor on paper, Rasa-manjari by Devidasa of Nurpur, Basohli, 1694/1695 175 57. Ativishrabdha-navodha-nayika (newly wedded trusting heroine), watercolor on paper, Rasa-manjari by Devidasa of Nurpur, Basohli, 1694/1695 175 58. “Radhika’s soft laugh,” watercolor on paper, Rasik-priya, sub-imperial Mughal, ca. 1615 177 59. Sadara-dhira-nayika, watercolor on paper, Rasik-priya, sub-imperial Mughal, ca. 1615 177 60. Sadara-dhira-nayika, watercolor on paper, Rasik-priya by Sahibdin, Mewar, ca. 1630 180 61. Pining nayika, watercolor on paper, Rasik-priya by Sahibdin, Mewar, ca. 1630 180 62. Nakh-sikh-nayika, watercolor on paper, Rasik-priya by Sahibdin, Mewar, ca. 1630 182 63. Restlessness of love, watercolor on paper, Satsai, Kangra, ca. 1780–1790 184 64. Meeting of the eyes, watercolor on paper, Satsai, Kangra, ca. 1780–1790 186 65. Month of Ashadha (June–July), watercolor on paper, barah-masa, Uniara, ca. 1760–1770 189 66. Month of Pausha (December–January), watercolor on paper, barah-masa, Uniara, ca. 1760–1770 189 67. Bhairava raga, watercolor on paper, raga-mala, Chunar, 1591 192 68. Hindol raga, opaque watercolor and gold on paper, raga-mala, Delhi-Agra, late eighteenth century 194 69. Megha raga [ragini], watercolor on paper, raga-mala, sub-imperial Mughal, ca. 1610 196 70. Saranga ragini, watercolor on paper, raga-mala by Sahibdin, Mewar, 1628 198 71. Portable Chola bronzes, between festivals, in the hall enclosing the sanctum, Kilaipalavur temple, Tamil Nadu 204 72. Priest performing a ritual purification, Tiruvenkadu temple, Tamil Nadu 205

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PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS In The Body Adorned, I present a series of interrelated chapters on the primacy of the richly adorned human body in the artistic traditions of India, as also in the related traditions of courtly literature, inscriptional prashastis (dynastic eulogies), and the poetry of bhakti (devotion). I hope to demonstrate that across the Indian subcontinent there exists a near-identity in sculptural and poetic representations of the idealized human body during the premodern period; I also suggest that we question the usage of the terms “sacred” and “profane” in the context of Indian sculpture and painting. Considering the extraordinary richness of the artistic material available from the subcontinent, it would be feasible to approach my subject in varying ways. It would certainly be worthwhile, for instance, to put together an extensive series of case studies of individual monuments or of groups of imagery belonging to specific time periods. I have chosen, however, to concentrate on a few select and intriguing issues that have continued to perplex scholars, students, and casual viewers alike, and I have attempted to account for them even while tracing their continuing significance across topographical, chronological, and religious boundaries. These issues frequently overlap and intersect, occasionally in a disconcerting manner; my hope, however, is that this approach may lead to a more richly hued discussion. None of the source material as such is unknown to specialists. While many new translations of literary texts in Sanskrit, Prakrit, and a range of vernacular languages have been made in recent years, and more will become available through the expanding series of the Clay Sanskrit Library, scholars of literature have long been familiar with the texts themselves. The inscriptions likewise have been known to epigraphists and have been published in volumes such as Epigraphia Indica, and the Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum, although frequently without translations. The poetry of bhakti has been the focus of some scholars of religion, while others have examined the role of images in temple rites and festivals. My own specialty, the artistic material, has been the subject of many studies by a range of scholars. My hope, however, in presenting these reflections on the human body in India’s art is to provide a fresh approach to the material, bringing together diverse resources that, when seen in concert, enrich our appreciation of Indian art in its milieu. I hope also that the focus on artistic material will provide an added dimension to those whose prime interest may be in literature, religion, anthropology, or history. Recent studies on the body, desire, and sexuality with varying geographical and cultural foci have informed my thinking, and I have felt free to draw on them to illuminate the Indian artistic material. My debt to my colleagues in the disciplines of Indian history, art history, literature, religious studies, and anthropology is immense; this book

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Preface and Acknowledgments

could not have been written without the groundwork they provided in their own publications. Although specific acknowledgments will be found in the notes, I would like to pay special tribute to Ananda Coomaraswamy, for whom my admiration has grown exponentially over the years; so often, when I imagine I have hit upon something significant, I have found an intuitive hint of the solution in one or another of his footnotes! For intellectual discourse, I am indebted to colleagues who have commented on specific aspects of my manuscript, or have graciously read portions of it at various stages of its gestation. I would especially like to mention my gratitude to Daud Ali, Rick Asher, Milo Beach, Allison Busch, Richard Davis, Thomas Donaldson, Eberhard Fischer, Jack Hawley, Steven Hopkins, Dipti Khera, Jack Laughlin, Indira Peterson, Sheldon Pollock, David Rosand, Gregory Schopen, Rupert Snell, Doris Srinivasan, Job Thomas, Joanne Waghorne, Blake Wentworth, and Irene Winter. I am indebted to the anonymous readers of my manuscript for the probing questions they asked and the thorny issues they raised; their intervention was influential in helping me to make this a tighter and more forcefully argued manuscript. If, despite their urgings, I have failed to convey my thoughts adequately, the fault is entirely mine. Finally, I must mention students at Columbia University who have been subjected, from time to time, to my musings on the body; their pointed queries and suggestions have been invaluable in making me reevaluate my conclusions. For their help in securing photographic material from a range of institutions, museums, and individuals, I am grateful to Laura Weinsten and Yuthika Sharma; for the onerous task of tightening the Indic language transliterations (where I have chosen to avoid diacritical marks to create a more accessible text), I am indebted to Shreya Vora. I would like to give special thanks to the Rockefeller Foundation for awarding me a residency at the Bellagio Study and Conference Center in Italy. It gave me the wonderful opportunity of a month of uninterrupted writing in the peace and luxury of its hilltop villa overlooking Lake Como; the company of fellow scholars working in a variety of fields provided remarkable stimulus to the production of this manuscript. For a subvention toward reproduction of the book’s many plates, I am indebted to Columbia University’s South Asia Institute. The finished book owes much to the professionalism of my editors, Lys Ann Weiss of Post Hoc Academic Publishing Services and Irene Pavitt of Columbia University Press, and designers Paulomi Shah and Revanta Sarabhai of Mapin Publishing; to all of them I express my deep gratitude.

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1. THE BODY AS LEITMOTIF Over the centuries, the sensuous bodily form, female and male, human and divine, has been a dominant feature in the vast and varied canvas of the Indian artistic tradition. The human figure—complete, elegant, adorned, and eye-catching—was, indeed, the leitmotif. An eleventh-century bronze image of the god Shiva from Tiruvenkadu in southern India, and a twelfth-century stone dancer from northern India, both displayed today in a museum context, illustrate this centrality. Shiva, a lithe, elegant figure with a slender torso, stands in gentle contrapposto known by the term tri-bhanga (triple-bend), with right leg gracefully crossed in front of the left (figure 1). One hand is held by his side in a gesture of ease, while the other is bent so as to rest his elbow against his now-missing bull mount. His face is exquisite and serene, with dreamy eyes that look into the distance, and his long, matted hair is wrapped around his head in turban-like fashion. Shiva wears

Figure 1. God Shiva, Chola bronze, Tiruvenkadu temple, Tamil Nadu, ca. 1011.

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The Body as Leitmotif

a short waist-cloth held in place by a jeweled hip-belt, and his rich adornment includes a forehead band, earrings, necklaces, a waist-band, sacred thread, armlets, bracelets, anklets, and rings on all ten fingers and toes. The god’s identifying attributes include the vertical third eye on his forehead, the crescent moon crowning his locks, and the serpent that peeps out of his “turban.” This most powerful of gods, the greatest of yogis, destroyer of demonic forces that threaten the world, is portrayed as the most beautiful of beings, a gorgeous figure, “the thief who stole my heart.”1 Equally seductive is the broken image of a dancer from a temple in northern India, perhaps Jamsot near Allahabad, who pirouettes in space so as to present the spectator with both a frontal view of her full breasts and a rear view of the curvature of her behind (figure 2). A long necklace swings away from her torso with her movement, while her translucent, scarf-like drapery blows away in the opposite direction. Necklaces, jeweled waist- and hip-bands, armlets, an elaborate hairstyle studded with decorative pins, a forehead band, and a tiara complete her rich ornamentation. Whether she is a celestial dancer or a human entertainer remains debatable, but either way her glamorous body holds center stage. These exquisite images in bronze and stone, as also the painted manuscript pages we shall examine in chapter 5, were all created for the discerning viewer, the connoisseur, a man (occasionally a woman) who belonged to the realm of the cultivated social elite. The world of Indian imagery was intended for the viewing pleasure not of laborer or farmer, but of king, courtier, aristocrat, and nagaraka (refined man-about-town).2 The world portrayed in Indian imagery too was not the everyday world of the peasant and worker, but the stately world of royalty and the divine courts of the gods. When the everyday world entered the artistic vocabulary, it was in the context of its interaction with monarchs and gods. It is true that stone statues adorned the walls of Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain temples, and bronze images were created to be honored within, suggesting that the images were available for viewing by all who chose to visit such shrines. But it is fair to assume that the subtleties of the sculptural program of the major temples were not created for the general viewer. We may have to rethink the idea of great temples—the Kailasanatha at Kanchipuram, the Kailasa at Ellora, the Rajarajeshvara at Tanjavur, the Lingaraja at Bhubaneshvar—as places of worship intended for the general public.3 Most villagers worshipped, and still worship, in their own simple yet potent village shrines, generally containing nothing more elaborate than a rounded stone to represent the linga emblem of Shiva or a vermilion-daubed stone to suggest the presence of the goddess; grandeur and artistic merit were not their prime concern.4 I do not believe I am overstating the case for elite involvement in the building of large stone temples that required a substantial influx of resources. It would be well to keep in mind that major royal temples, lavishly adorned with sculpted images, were frequently built to affirm and establish the conquest of a region by a new dynasty, and that successive monarchs also constructed similar grand temples to reaffirm their own overlordship.5 The prime audience for such a

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Figure 2. Dancer, stone, possibly Jamsot, Uttar Pradesh, twelfth century.

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royal temple, and its exquisite sculptured decoration, comprised feudatory princes, officials at the court, and Brahmin priests, all of whom belonged to the elite of the kingdom. One may also assume that temples built by chieftains, court officials, wealthy ladies, or Brahmins were built to be admired and applauded by their own circle of aristocratic peers. They were intended to portray the realm of the gods and the world of royalty, not that of the ordinary citizen. The discriminating audience that appreciated courtly literature in Sanskrit, as in Tamil and other vernacular languages, resembled the select circle of connoisseurs who recognized the aesthetic values of precisely modeled sculpture and finely crafted paintings. Kavya—the term given to Sanskrit poetry and drama, with their elaborate and sophisticated rules of vocabulary, figures of speech, and shlesha (double meaning)— largely focused on the divine world of the gods or of royalty on earth and was intended for recitation or performance at the court. A similarly elite performative venue is valid for much of the later vernacular literature, composed well into the eighteenth century, which included relatively erudite works calling for appreciation from connoisseurs who had the training necessary to appreciate their intricacies and overtones. Equally restricted was the audience for the copper-plate and stone inscriptions, sometimes over a hundred verses long, issued by monarchs and highly placed officials. Copper-plate charters commence with verses invoking the deities, and devote the greater part of the inscription to the prashasti (praise of the dynastic line), which traces royal genealogy back to the sun or the moon; they conclude with a brief statement of the immediate reason for the proclamation. Southern Indian inscriptions, which commence in Sanskrit, generally change at this point to the vernacular to spell out the details of the gift of land, villages, or other property to a Brahmin or a temple.6 These inscriptions served multiple purposes, not the least being that the prashasti, aptly termed “political poetry,” was used to validate dynastic claims to the overlordship of a region.7 The audience for these charters was, once again, the elite of the kingdom. Such documents were taken out to the site of the actual donation, where the proclamation was read aloud for all concerned to hear; the “luminous language,” even if not comprehended by the population at large, represented “something sublime and exalted.”8 The Sanskrit part of these charters, which made up the greater part of the text, would have revealed its meaning only to learned court officials and Brahmins; the details of the gift, couched in the vernacular, had a somewhat wider audience that included local officials entrusted with the implementation of the terms of the gift. Inscriptions engraved on slabs of stone, to be placed in the temples or embedded into temple walls, were similar in their formulas and had an equally limited audience. Estimates of the total number of inscribed records in India vary. Richard Salomon follows D. C. Sircar in quoting the figure of 90,000.9 N. Karashima’s estimate is somewhat lower, with inscriptions in Sanskrit and other northern languages number-

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ing some 23,000, while those in Tamil are 30,000, and Kannada and Telugu inscriptions amount to 17,000 and 10,000, respectively.10 Sheldon Pollock’s more recent estimate of Kannada records as numbering 25,000 certainly makes Karnataka “one of the most densely inscribed pieces of real estate in the world.”11 The significance of these numbers remains to be assessed. The nature and length of the records in southern languages need to be determined before assuming that inscriptions were more popular in the south than in the north. Possibly too, as Karashima suggests, Sanskrit inscriptions from the north were lost when the area came under Muslim rule, or were minimally produced during that period. A recent study with a slightly different focus points out that scholars have recorded and studied inscriptions from temples to the detriment of records found in agricultural, village, and other contexts;12 while the point is well taken, this factor does not affect the specific use of inscriptional material in this book. My extensive use of literary sources to illuminate the sometimes more indeterminate world of sculpted and painted form is, I believe, appropriate because sculpture and painting, together with poetry, drama, and inscriptions, are part and parcel of the same refined and urbane world. It is relevant to remember that both the visual and literary worlds possess texts that treat aesthetic expression not as individual articulations, but as stylized and all-encompassing values. The poet is instructed into tropes like sandalwood hailing from the Malaya mountains, peacocks dancing in the rainy season, the moon in Shiva’s locks as crescent-shaped; good poetic usage does not allow of sandalwood coming from anywhere other than the Malaya mountains.13 Similarly, the artist is trained to portray eyes that resemble a carp or a lotus petal, to model the male torso on the frontal view of a bull’s head, and to shape the female arm, especially in southern India, as the pliant green bamboo. Certainly, the rendering of eyes that resemble anything other than the carp or the lotus petal finds little favor in the Indian repertoire of artistic excellence. The sculpted images with which this chapter began are not an expression of an individual artist’s idea of beauty; rather, the artist gave shape to a stylized concept, to a conventional and accepted ideal of beauty. These artistic conventions explain the striking similarity among the images adorning any one temple, whether at Khajuraho, Bhubaneshvar, Mount Abu, or Somnathpur, frequently making it impossible to distinguish the work of one artist from that of another belonging to the same workshop. An instructive case in point comes from the Hoysala temples, where artists frequently carved their names beneath the images they sculpted. A comparison of the work of sculptor Malitamma at Amritapura in his youth, at Harnahalli in his maturity, and at Somnathpur in his old age reveals no noticeable difference. Neither do we see any meaningful distinction between Malitamma’s work at Somnathpur and that, say, of the sculptor Chaudaya.14 Lee Siegel’s comments regarding erotic poetry transfer exactly to the world of sculpture; like the poet, the artist “expresses collective emotions, institutionalized ideals, feelings which the aestheticians and rhetoricians had established as tasteful and true.”15 In this

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context, one cannot but recall Durkheim’s concept of the collective mind of society as the cohesive bonds of the cultural imagination of a people. It is worth stressing that despite the apparent restrictions placed on artists and the specific formulas given to them, strict adherence to prescription alone does not lead to success; both excellent poets and mediocre ones referred to Malaya mountain sandalwood, just as hack artists as much as talented ones modeled eyes to resemble a carp.

The Body Envisioned: Inscriptions and Literary Sources The emphasis on the centrality of the well-formed human body, so evident in the images we examined, is seen also in the creations of Indian poets and composers of inscriptional eulogies. It is intriguing to consider the manner in which the beauty of the physical human body was so often the touchstone against which poets compared the glories of nature, be they sky, earth, or gardens. Inanimate manmade objects, too, such as cities, temples, and wells, are frequently evoked in terms of a woman’s body, and their “interaction” is compared to the coupling of human lovers. For instance, the sky and earth are described as lovers wrapping their thighs around each other; a water well, adorned with tufted plants, is compared to a woman adorned with jewels; a temple is said to be longing for the presence of the full-bosomed women who arrive for worship and linger. A few examples of these astonishing verbal comparisons will reinforce the centrality of the human form in the literary imagination of India. A stone inscription of thirty Sanskrit verses composed in the late twelfth century speaks of the earth, the sky, and a temple in terms of human erotic love. The verses were composed by the donor, Devagana, to record his gift of a Shiva temple near Nagpur during the reign of the Chedi prince Prithvideva: First gratified, as it were, with the close embrace of the thighs of the earth, enjoyed by many princes, the surrounding sky, like a clever lover, accompanying his action with a smile of extreme love, eagerly, within sight of the damsels of heaven, kisses, as it were, the face of Fortune, this (temple) desirous of receiving on all sides the heavy embrace of bodies, trembling with the pangs of love, of the women of the regions.16

Waters joining the ocean, and women plunging in the waters of a well, are described in terms of human erotic union in a Sanskrit inscription of the year 467. Dattabhatta, commander of the forces of Prabhakara, a Gupta feudatory prince, made a gift of a well, a water-stall, a Buddhist stupa, and a garden to a Buddhist Lokottara monastery at Mandasore in central India:

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May this store of water (i.e., the well), that constantly enjoys the festivity of union with the bodies of many women (who go to bathe there), always be full17 like the ocean that (also) enjoys the constant festivity of union with many rivers (who are, as it were) his wives.18

The stone slab inscription commences with a verse invoking the Buddha, but this in no way inhibits its use of erotic imagery. Also from Mandasore is a record that commemorates the restoration of a brick temple to the sun god, originally built by a guild of silk weavers. The Sanskrit inscription compares the glories of the town to a beautiful, fully adorned woman: Just as a woman, though endowed with youth and beauty and adorned with the arrangement of golden necklaces and betelleaves and flowers, does not go to meet her lover in a secret place until she has put on a pair of coloured silken cloths so the whole of this region of earth is adorned through them, as if with a silken garment, agreeable to the touch, variegated with divisions of different colours, and pleasing to the eye.

This inscription, incised in the year 529 during the reign of the Gupta king Kumaragupta, proceeds to compare the earth itself to the female form: While Kumaragupta was reigning over the whole earth, whose moving girdle is the verge of the four oceans, whose high breasts are the mountains, Sumeru and Kailasa, and whose smile are the blowing flowers showered forth from the borders of the woods.19

I will give one last example from the inscriptional corpus of this type of uniquely body-centered verbal imagery. A Sanskrit record dated in the year 1227, during the rule of a Muslim Saka king, Nasaradin, from the town of Palam (today’s Delhi), compares a well and its sustaining waters to a beautiful woman slaking the thirst of her lovers: May the well, like a lovely woman with rotund upheaving breasts, gorgeous with undulating necklaces, the assuager of the thirst of many a lovesick swain, decorated with the seried riches of flower-tufted plants, be for your gratification.20

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It would appear that the human bodily form was hailed as the epitome of manifested perfection, and that all objects were seen to gain in meaning, and to be best understood, through comparisons with human beauty and human behavior, especially in the context of erotic love and union. From the literary corpus, I will restrict myself to three examples that serve to further emphasize the extraordinary body-centered literary imagination, two taken from a Prakrit Apabhramsha text, and one from a Sanskrit kavya. The Apabhramsha Pasanaha-chariu (Life of Parshvanatha), which details the hagiography of the twentythird Jina, Parshvanatha (Pasanaha), was composed by Shridhara in 1132. In its first book, Shridhara describes the glory of the city of Varanasi in terms of a lovely courtesan: The wide ramparts are like her bodice, highly valued by many types of paramours. It has rows of raised banners like her fingernails and temples erect like the nipples of her swollen breasts. The city-gate, like her mouth, gives rise to passion. The water-filled moat appears as the three folds [on her abdomen].21

In the same book, Shridhara visualizes the river Jamuna, too, as a beautiful courtesan: Her upper garment was the globules of foam and her glorious breasts the sporting rahanga birds. Her romavali, effective in distracting the minds of learned men, was the network of algae. Her beautiful ringlets of braided hair were the rows of bees, and her lengthy eyes, the petals of the blossomed lotus. Her navel, dispelling the heat of those with fever, was the whirlpool churned by the wind. . . . Her buttocks were the wide, glistening sand banks.22

Unique to the Sanskrit tradition is the idea of the romavali (a fine line of hair running upward from the navel and considered a mark of beauty); here it is compared to the ring of algae adorning a river. The seventh-century Sanskrit poet Bharavi made use of comparable similes when he wrote of the apsaras in a riverine landscape that “the sandbanks could not equal / their full and heavy hips.” Indira Peterson emphasizes that “convention governs every aspect of kavya composition, from the subject matter of poetry and the formal requirements of the stanza and of figures of speech (alankara), to the objects with which a woman’s face may be compared.”23 To demonstrate the deep-rooted nature and the persistence of these similes and metaphors as an indication of a body-centered imagination,

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I shall cite yet another comparison of a woman and a river from one of the earliest Sanskrit kavyas that has come down to us, Ashvaghosha’s first-century Buddha-charita (Life of Buddha). Here is his description of one of the women the Buddha views just before he leaves the palace in the episode known as The Great Departure: Another [woman], lying with her bamboo pipe in her hands and her white robe slipping off her breasts, resembled a river with lotuses [hands] being enjoyed by a straight row of bees [flute] and with banks [breasts] laughing with the foam [white robe] of water.24

The overwhelming centrality of body-based imagery, in both inscriptional and literary texts, is striking and unmistakable. We may note here what the reader has, no doubt, already intuited—that inscriptional poetry qualifies as “literature,” even though it has been largely ignored by Sanskrit literary scholars and theoreticians, whether modern or historical.25 Sheldon Pollock emphasizes “how closely intertwined were the histories of prashasti and kavya,” and his work makes abundantly clear the necessity of studying both sources to explicate the circumstances surrounding the rise of the Sanskrit cosmopolis during the first millennium, as also the vernacularization of the early second millennium.26 Inscriptions were composed by poets, some finer than others.27 The poets generally state their names in the closing verse; frequently we find also the names of the scribe who copied the text on stone and of the artist who cut it into its final form. For instance, a Bengal stone inscription of Vijayasena dating from the late eleventh century, which we will encounter in chapter 4, was composed by the Sanskrit poet Umapatidhara, perhaps the very poet mentioned by Jayadeva of Gita-govinda fame.28 It was engraved by Shulapani, who describes himself as the crest-jewel of the Varendra guild of artists.29 More often, the poet of a eulogy is not known from other sources. Thus the Ratanpur stone inscription from 1163/1164, which we will also encounter in chapter 4,30 was composed in Sanskrit by Tribhuvanapala, written (on the stone) by Kumarapala, and incised by the shilpis (artists) Dhanapati and Ishvara.31 The Kalinjar Sanskrit stone inscription in the Nilakantha temple, dated to 1201, was composed by the patron himself, the Chandela monarch Paramarddi, and was both written on stone and incised by shilpi Padma.32 Such prashasti poets not infrequently referred to their works as kavya, and indeed both types of literary works were produced at and for the court.33 Yet, as Pollock points out, a clear hierarchy emerges in which the prashasti writers were held in lesser regard than those who wrote kavya.34 Additionally, at least one quotation from a Sanskrit kavya—the introductory verse of seventh-century poet Bana’s Harsha-charita (Life of Emperor Harsha)35—was

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used repeatedly as the first verse of a wide range of inscriptions from the southern part of the subcontinent:36 Namas tunga-shiras-chumbi-chandra-chamara-charave Trailokya-nagara-arambha-mula-sthambhaya-shambhave Praise be to Shambhu, beautified by the chowrie moon touching his lofty head, like to a foundation pillar of the city that is the universe.37

This eulogy prefaces numerous copper-plate and stone inscriptions, from Hampi in the northern Deccan to Tanjavur in the south, and across the various districts of Karnataka. The records range in date from the tenth to the fifteenth century, the period of “vernacularization,” and include those of the later Chalukyas, Yadavas, Shilaharas, and Kalachuris; the Vijayanagar emperors; the Tanjavur Nayaks; and a range of feudatory princes. Several of these records are in Kannada, making it relevant to refer to a Kannada text on aesthetics, the Kavi-raja-margam (Path of Master Poets), written at the very end of the ninth century. Introducing this text, Pollock points out that it “announced the new vernacular aesthetics,” and that it salutes Bana in its prologue before praising Kannada prose writers.38 It seems possible that the high esteem in which Bana was held in the Kannadalanguage region may have been responsible for the frequent use of Bana’s Sanskrit stanza as the initial invocation in so many Kannada prashastis.39 Another such verse dedicated to Vishnu as Varaha, whose source I have been unable to trace, occurs in inscriptions between the seventh and thirteenth centuries; it is most often seen on its own, although occasionally it follows Bana’s verse in praise of Shiva.40

The Body: Beauty, Rasa, the Auspicious Sculpted images in the medium of stone and bronze, wood and clay decorated the walls of temples and palaces or were the object of puja and adoration by devotees. The creation of such images and their reception will be addressed in parallel as we consider varying aspects of the body in this study. I shall make use of neglected inscriptional material, and highlight passages from known literary texts, in order to better understand and appreciate ancient works of sculpture and to establish contextualization that enables an awareness of the original viewers’ responses to such imagery. Both traditional literary texts and inscriptional eulogies shed light on the manner in which Indians of bygone days, of the “there and then,” viewed and responded to the beautiful, well-adorned body. Word and image appear as twins so that it is difficult to say which was rendered into the other.

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Were the tropes of Sanskrit kavya, Prakrit literature, or Tamil poetry in the minds of artists creating images, or were sculpted images the inspiration for the poets’ productions? It appears that these interchangeable alternatives must both have come into play at one time or another. The danger of speaking wrongly for the silent other, of “well-intentioned ventriloquism,” is indeed an issue.41 Equally vital, however, is the need to “recognize the unspoken” in textual sources and to keep in mind the authors’ possible agendas and audiences.42 The use of literary material to illuminate sculptural and pictorial imagery appears to put us on a less dangerous if still slippery path, one that we should tread with a degree of awareness. In addition, we should keep in mind the admittedly partial and incomplete nature of the artistic remains that have come down to us. We have to agree with Nanette Salomon on the “profound impossibility of retrieving an accurate and objective account of the past,” although at the same time there appears to be definite value in allowing ourselves to be “seduced by the fragments to try to do so.”43 It may appear trite in certain contexts to emphasize that the gendered body of an artistic tradition is a social construct.44 Still, it is useful to repeat this in the context of the South Asian artistic tradition, and to stress that the body of the visual arts is best understood when evaluated within its correct social milieu. Another truism worth repeating is that the works of art that constitute our focus spoke differently to different people in differing eras. Viewers of the eleventh and twelfth centuries surely reacted differently to the two images we have already discussed than did those of the mid-twentieth century when the bronze was unearthed and placed in a local museum for safekeeping, and the stone statue traveled to the United States to enter a museum collection.45 So, too, the indigenous temple-goers’ reaction—awe, wonder, devotion—was at odds with the negative critical response of the British officials entrusted with the preservation of an ancient heritage. Thomas Biggs, a nineteenthcentury officer of the Bombay Artillery entrusted with recording temple sculptures through the new medium of photography, lamented the “indecent sculptures” that proved, for him, “the early date at which the morals of India assume such a headlong and downward decay.”46 Recent years have witnessed some discussion on the question of whether cross-cultural universals exist in the field of aesthetics, or whether one should emphasize cultural specificity. The arena of anthropology has been the prime venue for these discussions, although more recently art historians, too, have entered the debate.47 The balance of opinion is in favor of specificity, reinforcing the age-old adage that beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder—a beholder attuned to a particular ethos, its cultural mores, its ideals, and its aspirations. Most of these discussions and reflections, it should be noted, have taken place among scholars who study cultures that lack extensive literary records, such as those of Africa or parts of the ancient Near Eastern world. For instance, Irene Winter has demonstrated that ancient Meso-

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potamians had no term that corresponds to the word “beauty”; instead, their inscriptions speak of “luster,” “radiance,” and a “well-formed body” as desirable or enviable qualities of an excellent physique.48 India possesses an extensive corpus of works on ancient art and aesthetics; the Sanskrit term for “art” is shilpa, artists are shilpis, and art texts are shilpa shastras. Sanskrit has over a hundred words and phrases to describe beauty, loveliness, and attraction, a large proportion of which are connected with the concept of amorous play. In an insightful article published more than forty years ago, Daniel Ingalls highlighted this plethora of choices and spoke of some of the reasons for it.49 One explanation is that beauty, in India, is frequently expressed in subjective terms, as it affects the senses of the viewer. The eyes are specially favored with a range of phrases that include “a drink for one’s eyes alone” (netraika-peya), “a festival for one’s eyes” (netrotsava), and “a resting place for one’s eyes” (netra-vishrama-patra). The heart and mind are captivated by beauty that “captures the heart” (harati-hridaya) or “steals the heart” (hridaya chaura). Another explanation for the vastly expanded vocabulary for beauty is that Sanskrit has a complete set of words to describe beauty in motion as against beauty at rest. The verb lasati, for example, is used to suggest grace in repose that arouses desire; with a prefix, vilasati indicates coquettish beauty expressed through movement. The basic Sanskrit word for “beauty,” saundarya, to which are related sundara (beautiful) and sundari (beautiful woman), is rarely used in poetry, perhaps because it was considered general, colorless, or nondescriptive. More popular is lavanya for “beauty,” “loveliness,” or “charm.” The word rupa, which merely means “form,” generally implies a beautiful or handsome form, beauty, elegance, or grace. Feminine nouns used in the context of beauty include taruni (literally, “creeper”), for a slender young woman; divya (a heavenly woman); kanta (a lovely woman or beloved); and kamini (a woman desirous of love). Masculine nouns for “beloved” include kanta and vallabha. Verbs used in the context of love include rama (to play or have sexual intercourse) and hara (to attract, captivate, or capture). Also popular are adjectives like nandana (gladdening) or the slightly stronger ranjana (exciting passion). The prefix su (good or beautiful) is frequently used to transform words, as in sutanu (beautiful body), subhru (beautiful eyebrows), sukantha (beautiful neck), and the like. Charu refers to something precious and hence loved. Several of these words—including sundara, kanta, charu, rupa, and words with the prefix su—are equally appropriate to describe male or female beauty.50 Additionally, as in other languages, there are words that introduce the idea of radiance through light, including shobha (splendor), ruchi (luster), and kanti (brilliance). The sheer number of words, with their subtle overtones and nuances of meaning, used to describe the infinite variety of the human figure and its effect on the viewer could in itself be indicative of the primacy accorded to the excellence of the body beautified.

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India’s theory of aesthetics, known by the term rasa (largely restricted to the Sanskrit tradition), likewise laid emphasis on the variety of thought, feeling, and emotion experienced by human beings. Enunciated by the famous writer Bharata, perhaps in the fourth century, in a work titled Natya-shashtra (Treatise on Drama), the rasa theory is undoubtedly of earlier origin, since Bharata himself speaks of his debt to earlier masters. Literally, rasa is the juice or extract of a fruit or vegetable, its finest and subtlest part. In the context of aesthetics, rasa is the heightened sense of awareness evoked by any of the fine arts, be it dance, drama, poetry, music, painting, or sculpture. The ability of the artist to communicate the varying emotions (bhavas), and of the viewer to experience them as the corresponding aesthetic sensation, constitute the basis of the rasa theory. The rasas were originally eight in number: the erotic (shringara), comic (hasya), pathetic (karuna), furious (raudra), heroic (virya), terrible (bhayanaka), odious (bibhatsa), and wondrous (adbhuta). Each is created by the artist’s ability to evoke its concomitant bhava: love (rati), mirth (hasa), sorrow (shoka), anger (krodha), energy (utsaha), fear (bhaya), disgust (jugupsa), and astonishment (vismaya). At a somewhat later date, a ninth rasa—the quiescent (shanta), together with its corresponding bhava of equanimity (shama)—was introduced. The unique and well-enunciated rasa theory appears to center on viewer response. According to most aestheticians, rasa is created by the artist—actor, dancer, painter, sculptor—but is experienced solely by the discerning, cultivated viewer, known as a rasika (connoisseur). However, others argue that rasa must be felt by the actors in order to communicate it adequately to their viewers. While rasa is most easily experienced in dance and drama, texts on painting also include a discussion of this concept. Thus the Chitra-sutra (Painting Text), which makes up a section of the well-known Vishnu-dharmottara-purana, a work that may date to the sixth century, specifies that works of art intended for display in public spaces may exhibit any of the nine rasas, but that those intended to decorate private homes should be restricted to three: the erotic, the comic, and the quiescent!51 The erotic rasa of shringara is described as the king of rasas and has high visibility in the visual and literary material that is our concern. Many writers treated all rasas but shringara in a perfunctory manner, while the great king and theoretician, Bhoja of Dhara, wrote a major treatise, Shringara-prakasha (Light on the Erotic [rasa]), on this most excellent and primary of rasas. Another concept that plays a central role in this book is “the auspicious,” a word that undoubtedly seems “a little strange and old-fashioned in modern English.”52 Still, it is a term whose importance cannot be overstated. Two decades ago, scholars lamented how the concept of purity had overshadowed auspiciousness as a category in understanding the cultural context of premodern India.53 But in recent years, this situation has been largely rectified. An anthropological study first highlighted the category

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of “the auspicious,” and its antonym “the inauspicious,” as a central node of interpretation, and pointed out that its resonance is also seen in texts of the premodern period. Gloria Raheja’s research demonstrates that the basic function of dana (gifting) in the northern Indian village she studied is to promote the auspiciousness and well-being of an entire village or community by transferring inauspiciousness to the recipients of the gift, generally Brahmins, who are willing to accept such offerings.54 I believe the auspicious is a factor of crucial significance in understanding both the subject matter of the artistic tradition of premodern India and its social context. The most commonly used words for the auspicious appear to be mangala, shubha, and kalyana, all of which imply welfare, good fortune, happiness, and prosperity. These words, especially shubha, are routinely used as a prefix for a variety of events—shubha-kala (time), shubha-masa (month), shubha-muhurta (astrological conjunction), shubha-yatra (journey), and the like—and are thus used as attributes of objects.55 Major events such as childbirth, puberty, and marriage are as obviously associated with the auspicious as death is with the inauspicious. One may also view certain places, objects, and persons as embodying the auspicious, such as a pilgrimage spot (tirtha-sthana) or a pot of overflowing foliage (purna-kalasha). To go a step further, by embodying auspiciousness, the fertile woman (kanya, nari) and the monarch (raja, chakravartin) become in themselves emblems of the auspicious; they provide instances in which the “transferred epithet” has warranted validity.56 Further, as Frédérique Marglin has pointed out in her study of Puri temple dancers, the union of male and female invariably signifies the “stable state of auspiciousness.”57 I would suggest that this applies not only to societal life and to literature, but also to the visual arts of sculpture and painting. Sanskrit words for the auspicious further include shiva, shreyas, bhadra, dhanya, ishta, and svasti, all of which carry the implied meanings of “agreeable, propitious, favorable, desirable, beautiful, radiant, beneficial,” or in other words, bringing fortune.58 In the various inscriptions on which I have drawn liberally throughout this book, groups of words, clustered in various formations, appear as opening prayers for the bestowal of auspiciousness. Om svasti is one such; others include siddham astu, shubham astu, and om svasti shri. Verses or phrases of mangala (auspiciousness) in literary texts are also spoken of as ashish, from which comes ashirvada (literally, “words of auspiciousness,” or simply an approval, a sanction, a blessing). Om itself, or the more appropriate term of pranava, is also a blessing, a benediction, and its very sound is considered a means of conferring auspiciousness; it is the totally appropriate manner of commencing any and all inscriptions, social and sacred rituals, and a range of other undertakings. One cannot overstate the all-encompassing and pervasive nature of the concept of auspiciousness in the Indian context; it is an underlying perception that permeates everyday life, infusing it with marked significance.

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The Body and Woman: Sanskrit and Tamil Poetry In the course of this book, I shall use extracts drawn primarily from Sanskrit and Tamil poetry, both traditions with an ancient history, and later from Hindi, to make a variety of points about beauty, love, auspiciousness, and the centrality of the body. There are commonalities, but also differences, between the literary traditions, a subject on which Martha Selby has written eloquently.59 Sanskrit poetics is perhaps best understood in terms of the rasas and their corresponding “permanent feelings” or human emotions, the sthayi-bhavas. We have seen the connection between rasa and bhava and, for instance, that the rasa of the erotic (shringara) is the result of the underlying emotion of passion (rati), while the raudra-rasa (furious) is the result of the emotion of krodha (anger). In the tradition of Sanskrit love poetry, more often than not woman is confined to a variety of interior spaces that represent the apartments of the palace or mansion that she inhabits, together with its terraces, pavilions, and courtyards.60 Poets created extensive classifications of the nayika (heroine) with her friend and confidante (sakhi), devoting somewhat briefer sections to the nayaka (hero) and his companion (sakha). In Selby’s words, “[I]n this sequestered world, the woman is treated as something to be classified, typified, measured, and endlessly described.”61 Elaborate systems of classification of women are seen in the nayika-bheda (classifications of heroines) systems of the later Sanskritic and Hindi traditions; Sheldon Pollock’s translation of the Sanskrit Rasa-manjari (Bouquet of Delights) of around 1500 indicates that the text’s various permutations and combinations yield as many as 384 types.62 These descriptive systems, which Selby terms “biologic,” will enter our discussion in the final chapter. In Tamil poetry, woman appears to move more freely through space, and the entire landscape emotes with her. It is best read according to a convention exemplified by A. K. Ramanujan’s use of the title The Interior Landscape for his translations of early Tamil poetry.63 These poems are of two categories—either the akam love genre or the puram war genre. Central to the akam corpus is the concept of five tinais (contexts) that have geographical, spatial, temporal, and emotional connotations. Kurinchi, the fertile hilly tract that signifies lovers’ union, has at its opposite extreme the palai (desert wasteland), which connotes separation. In between are varying love experiences with the mullai (forest region), which suggests uncomplaining anticipation of the lover’s return; the salty, sandy neytal, which indicates lamenting the lover’s absence; and the marutam (fertile plains), which signals jealous quarreling. The mention of the seashore, as in a verse that commences “That man from the shores / with their spreading waters,” immediately signals to the knowledgeable reader/listener that the poem will be about irrevocable separation.64 A similar mood is indicated by the opening phrase “Like that nectar from the sea / with its rows of waves.”65 These works of Sangam poetry, substantially composed perhaps between 200 b.c.e. and 200 c.e., form the foundation for the

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verses of the later poet-saints, both Shaiva and Vaishnava, which we shall encounter in chapter 4. The Tamil tradition is less taxonomic than that of northern India, as we will see in chapter 2. Nevertheless, it categorizes women into seven different groups on the basis of age and sexual experience, ranging from the innocent petai (girl of five to seven years old) to the mature, experienced perilampen (thirty-two to forty years old). Common to both northern and southern traditions is the convention of describing the human form from head to toe, whether male or female, human or divine. The trope is known by the term nakh-sikh (toenail to crest) in Sanskrit and Hindi, sarapa (head to foot) in Urdu, and padadi-kesha (foot-first to hair) in Sanskrit and Sanskritic Tamil. A distinction is often drawn in texts between the description of a god or goddess, in which the viewers’ eyes and that of the poet should rest first on the divine feet and only then move upward, and that of a human, which may commence with the face and proceed downward. Any single head-to-toe description may range from a dozen lines of prose to over a hundred verses of poetry.

The Sacred and the Profane In the mid-twentieth century, Mircea Eliade spoke of “the abyss that divides the two modalities of experience—sacred and profane.”66 He described the sacred as “the opposite of the profane,” proclaiming that his aim was “to illustrate and define this opposition between sacred and profane.”67 He spoke of “the experience of profane space which is in direct contrast to the experience of sacred space.”68 While an Eliade-style analysis is outdated in writings that deal with India, it is interesting to note that his pronouncement on the dichotomy of sacred and profane coincided with the perceptive observation of Stella Kramrisch, pioneering scholar and interpreter of Indian art: “The art of India is neither religious nor secular, for the consistent fabric of Indian life was never rent by the western dichotomy of religious belief and worldly practice.”69 Her statement, contained in a thought-provoking essay that accompanied a rich selection of photographs of the sculpture, painting, and architecture of India, has rarely been quoted since; nor have the reasons for this lack of dichotomy been the subject of further exploration. I interpret her words to mean that she saw no sharp line between the sacred and the secular (or profane), and that the boundaries, if they existed, often blend and blur. Current scholarship rightly questions the very use of the terms “religious” and “secular” as applied to the architectural spaces of India.70 Places of worship, whether dedicated to the Buddhist, Hindu, or Jain faith, did not pertain exclusively to the gods, and they do not do so today. Rather, they serve a variety of other functions, including community gatherings of a more mundane character. For example, associated with the great Chola temples of the eleventh and twelfth centuries, and funded and sponsored by them, were a whole nexus of administrative units, banking institutions, hospitals, schools, jew-

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elry workshops, and dance, drama, and music companies. Indeed, the same applies to the celebrated Buddhist monastic universities, such as Nalanda and Vikramashila, or the impressive mountaintop Jain pilgrimage centers, such as Shatrunjaya and Girnar. At the other end of the spectrum, every palace, whether at Amber or Udaipur in Rajasthan or at Shri-ranga-patnam or Padmanabha-puram in the south, invariably included within its premises a temple shrine, even two, as indeed did the haveli or tinnai courtyard houses of India. That we might be surprised at the possibility of the coexistence of the sacred with the secular, the profane, or the sensuous discloses our Western mind-set. In order to adopt a postcolonial approach to the visual material, however, it is necessary to examine deep-rooted misconceptions before dismissing them as inapplicable to India. Let us take a look at words used in a precolonial context that seem to designate comparable differences. There is the worldly and the other-worldly (laukika and alaukika), the worldly and the sacred-textual (laukika and agamika), or the revealed and the unrevealed (drishtartha and adrishtartha).71 These pairs, however, do not denote an easy binary opposition between the spiritual and the material. As Jitendra Mohanty emphasizes, in a consideration of any system of thought, it is important that we do not import into our thinking distinctions that do not apply to that system.72 However, the weight of a hundred years of scholarship that has assumed the overall applicability of a dichotomous way of thinking requires a fully argued, richly documented interpretation to convincingly demonstrate that while the words “sacred” and “profane” might be meaningfully juxtaposed in the Western context, such a binary distinction has limited resonance on the Indian scene. In this study, whose chapters are in the nature of reflections on the artistic treatment of the human body, I propose to explore the intermingling of the sacred with the sensuous, the profane, and the secular—which, in the context of Indian art, adds to the negation of Eliade’s perceived dichotomy. Since several of the words I will be using are likely to resonate differently for each reader, it will be useful to clarify my usage. I use the term “profane,” as did Eliade, in its original meaning of “nonsacred,” or “outside the temple precincts,” from the Latin pro (before) and fanum (temple). My occasional use of the word “secular,” as a substitute for “profane,” is intended to be understood in its dictionary meaning of “not religious or spiritual”; it carries none of the nuances derived from its present-day political associations in the context of the Indian subcontinent. By “sensuous,” I refer to those images that display the human form in all its bodily glory— smoothly slender, curvaceous, and somewhat provocative—and that occasionally evoke a reaction of some discomfiture in the modern viewer. Sensuous imagery frequently has overtones of the erotic, a word somewhat more difficult to define; basically, I use “erotic” for sexually suggestive imagery, visual and verbal, but not for actual sexual acts. I shall not deal here with the overtly sexual art of India, which features coupling figures and a range of other sexual activities; that is a vast subject in itself, which has received consid-

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The Body as Leitmotif

erable, if uneven, treatment.73 Some readers may find this omission surprising, but my intention is not to deliberate on phenomena that are somewhat localized in space and time. My focus is the central position accorded, down the ages and across the length and breadth of the country, to the human form, a body that is exceptionally sensuous in its portrayal; since we are dealing with the artistically perfect human body, overtones of the erotic are bound to arise. This chapter, in particular, is devoted to highlighting the centrality of the body in the artistic and literary imagination of India and, indeed, in its religious ritual practices.

The Body in Life and Ritual While this book focuses on the proliferation of art in stone and bronze during the postVedic period, and on the accompanying post-Vedic literature, I shall begin with a brief consideration of the Rigvedic Purusha-sukta hymn, which speaks of the universe as originating from the sacrificial body of the divine Purusha. Vedic ritual centered on the brick sacrificial altar where offerings were made to the gods; no images were created of these deities, although they were already visualized verbally in bodily form. The artistic innovation of divine form arose only in the post-Vedic period, when images of Brahmanic deities, as indeed of the Buddha and Jina, were fashioned in human form. Yet even the Vedas chose to depict the absolute, the supreme Purusha, in anthropomorphic form as a glorious all-embracing body. The Purusha-sukta pictures every manifestation of power in creation as having emerged from a specific part of his body.74 The moon emerged from his mind, the sun from his eye, fire from his mouth, wind from his breath, space from his navel, the world of gods from his head, and the earth from his feet. In this manner, even Vedic imagination appears to have visualized a perfect bodily form as the source of all beauty and power. We might commence our study of the post-Vedic dominance of the body by examining one obvious explanation for the lack of dichotomy between worldly and otherworldly imagery. The Indian, largely the Hindu, pictured the ideal life in the world as a journey with four connected, graded, and successive paths, the goals of each facilitating entry into the next. Stella Kramrisch referred to this briefly when she categorized release (moksha) as the ultimate aim of life in India, and spoke of India’s “entire social structure, with its Dharma or laws of human righteousness and cosmic order, its Artha or accumulated wealth, and Kama, the fountain springs of love and passion.”75 This concept is further elaborated by the formulation of the four successive ashramas (stages) of life: the student stage (brahma-charin), the married state (griha-stha), the phase of the recluse who withdraws from active participation in worldly affairs to a life of study and contemplation (vanaprastha), and finally the life of the renunciant whose withdrawal from the world becomes complete and total (sannyasin). Needless to say, the four goals and

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“An important work

for anyone interested in Indian art or religion... Highly recommended.” —Choice

ART

The Body Adorned

Dissolving Boundaries between Sacred and Profane in India’s Art

Vidya Dehejia 238 pages, 30 photographs 44 black & white photographs 7 x 10” (178 x 254 mm), hc ISBN: 978-81-89995-04-1 ₹1850 | $45 | £29 2009 • World rights



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