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Serpents to saints: The fascinating journey of India's spiritual art
Serpents to saints: The fascinating journey of India's spiritual art

Yahoo

time17 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Serpents to saints: The fascinating journey of India's spiritual art

A new exhibition at the British Museum in London showcases the rich journey of India's spiritual art. Titled Ancient India: Living Traditions, it brings together 189 remarkable objects spanning centuries. Visitors can explore everything from 2,000-year-old sculptures and paintings to intricate narrative panels and manuscripts, revealing the stunning evolution of spiritual expression in India. Art from the Indian subcontinent underwent a profound transformation between 200BC and AD600. The imagery which depicted gods, goddesses, supreme preachers and enlightened souls of three ancient religions - Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism - was reimagined from symbolic to more recognisably deriving from human form. While the three religions shared common cultural roots - worshipping ancient nature spirits such as potent serpents or the feisty peafowl - they negotiated dramatic shifts in religious iconography during this pivotal period which continues to have contemporary relevance two millennia apart. "Today we can't imagine the veneration of Hindu, Jain or Buddhist divine spirits or deities without a human form, can we? Which is what makes this transition so interesting," says Sushma Jansari, the exhibition's curator. The exhibition explores both the continuity and change in India's sacred art through five sections, starting with the nature spirits, followed by sub-sections dedicated to each of the three religions, and concluding with the spread of the faiths and their art beyond India to other parts of the world like Cambodia and China. The centrepiece of the Buddhist section of the exhibition – a striking two-sided sandstone panel that shows the evolution of the Buddha - is perhaps the most distinguishable in depicting this great transition. One side, carved in about AD250, reveals the Buddha in human form with intricate embellishments, while on the other - carved earlier in about 50-1BC - he's represented symbolically through a tree, an empty throne and footprints. The sculpture - from a sacred shrine in Amaravati (in India's south-east) - was once part of the decorative circular base of a stupa, or a Buddhist monument. To have this transformation showcased on "one single panel from one single shrine is quite extraordinary", says Ms Jansari. In the Hindu section, another early bronze statue reflects the gradual evolution of sacred visual imagery through the depiction of goddesses. The figure resembles a yakshi - a powerful primordial nature spirit that can bestow both "abundance and fertility, as well as death and disease" - recognisable through her floral headdress, jewellery and full figure. But it also incorporates multiple arms holding specific sacred objects which became characteristic of how Hindu female deities were represented in later centuries. On display also are captivating examples of Jain religious art, which largely focus on its 24 enlightened teachers called tirthankaras. The earliest such representations were found on a mottled pink sandstone dating back about 2,000 years and began to be recognised through the sacred symbol of an endless knot on the teachers' chest. The sculptures commissioned across these religions were often made in common workshops in the ancient city of Mathura which the curators say explains why there are marked similarities between them. Unlike other shows on South Asia, the exhibition is unique because it is the "first ever" look at the origins of all three religious artistic traditions together, rather than separately, says Ms Jansari. In addition, it carefully calls attention to the provenance of every object on display, with brief explanations on the object's journey through various hands, its acquisition by museums and so on. The show highlights intriguing detail such as the fact that many of the donors of Buddhist art in particular were women. But it fails to answer why the material transformation in the visual language took place. "That remains a million-dollar question. Scholars are still debating this," says Ms Jansari. "Unless more evidence comes through, we aren't going to know. But the extraordinary flourishing of figurative art tells us that people really took to the idea of imagining the divine as human." The show is a multi-sensory experience - with scents, drapes, nature sounds, and vibrant colours designed to evoke the atmospherics of active Hindu, Buddhist and Jain religious shrines. "There's so much going on in these sacred spaces, and yet there's an innate calm and serenity. I wanted to bring that out," says Ms Jansari, who collaborated with several designers, artists and community partners to put it together. Punctuating the displays are screens displaying short films of practising worshipers from each of the religions in Britain. These underscore the point that this isn't just about "ancient art but also living tradition" that's continuously relevant to millions of people in the UK and other parts of the globe, far beyond modern India's borders. The exhibition draws from the British Museum's South Asian collection with 37 loans from private lenders and national and international museums and libraries in the UK, Europe and India. Ancient India: Living Traditions is showing at the British Museum, London, from 22 May to 19 October. Follow BBC News India on Instagram, YouTube, X and Facebook.

Serpents to saints: The fascinating journey of India's spiritual art
Serpents to saints: The fascinating journey of India's spiritual art

BBC News

time18 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

Serpents to saints: The fascinating journey of India's spiritual art

A new exhibition at the British Museum in London showcases the rich journey of India's spiritual art. Titled Ancient India: Living Traditions, it brings together 189 remarkable objects spanning can explore everything from 2,000-year-old sculptures and paintings to intricate narrative panels and manuscripts, revealing the stunning evolution of spiritual expression in from the Indian subcontinent underwent a profound transformation between 200BC and AD600. The imagery which depicted gods, goddesses, supreme preachers and enlightened souls of three ancient religions - Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism - was reimagined from symbolic to more recognisably deriving from human the three religions shared common cultural roots - worshipping ancient nature spirits such as potent serpents or the feisty peafowl - they negotiated dramatic shifts in religious iconography during this pivotal period which continues to have contemporary relevance two millennia apart."Today we can't imagine the veneration of Hindu, Jain or Buddhist divine spirits or deities without a human form, can we? Which is what makes this transition so interesting," says Sushma Jansari, the exhibition's exhibition explores both the continuity and change in India's sacred art through five sections, starting with the nature spirits, followed by sub-sections dedicated to each of the three religions, and concluding with the spread of the faiths and their art beyond India to other parts of the world like Cambodia and China. The centrepiece of the Buddhist section of the exhibition – a striking two-sided sandstone panel that shows the evolution of the Buddha - is perhaps the most distinguishable in depicting this great side, carved in about AD250, reveals the Buddha in human form with intricate embellishments, while on the other - carved earlier in about 50-1BC - he's represented symbolically through a tree, an empty throne and sculpture - from a sacred shrine in Amaravati (in India's south-east) - was once part of the decorative circular base of a stupa, or a Buddhist monument. To have this transformation showcased on "one single panel from one single shrine is quite extraordinary", says Ms Jansari. In the Hindu section, another early bronze statue reflects the gradual evolution of sacred visual imagery through the depiction of goddesses. The figure resembles a yakshi - a powerful primordial nature spirit that can bestow both "abundance and fertility, as well as death and disease" - recognisable through her floral headdress, jewellery and full it also incorporates multiple arms holding specific sacred objects which became characteristic of how Hindu female deities were represented in later centuries. On display also are captivating examples of Jain religious art, which largely focus on its 24 enlightened teachers called tirthankaras. The earliest such representations were found on a mottled pink sandstone dating back about 2,000 years and began to be recognised through the sacred symbol of an endless knot on the teachers' chest. The sculptures commissioned across these religions were often made in common workshops in the ancient city of Mathura which the curators say explains why there are marked similarities between other shows on South Asia, the exhibition is unique because it is the "first ever" look at the origins of all three religious artistic traditions together, rather than separately, says Ms addition, it carefully calls attention to the provenance of every object on display, with brief explanations on the object's journey through various hands, its acquisition by museums and so show highlights intriguing detail such as the fact that many of the donors of Buddhist art in particular were women. But it fails to answer why the material transformation in the visual language took place."That remains a million-dollar question. Scholars are still debating this," says Ms Jansari. "Unless more evidence comes through, we aren't going to know. But the extraordinary flourishing of figurative art tells us that people really took to the idea of imagining the divine as human." The show is a multi-sensory experience - with scents, drapes, nature sounds, and vibrant colours designed to evoke the atmospherics of active Hindu, Buddhist and Jain religious shrines."There's so much going on in these sacred spaces, and yet there's an innate calm and serenity. I wanted to bring that out," says Ms Jansari, who collaborated with several designers, artists and community partners to put it together. Punctuating the displays are screens displaying short films of practicing worshipers from each of the religions in Britain. These underscore the point that this isn't just about "ancient art but also living tradition" that's continuously relevant to millions of people in the UK and other parts of the globe, far beyond modern India's exhibition draws from the British Museum's South Asian collection with 37 loans from private lenders and national and international museums and libraries in the UK, Europe and India. Ancient India: Living Traditions is showing at the British Museum, London, from 22 May to 19 October. Follow BBC News India on Instagram, YouTube, X and Facebook.

Your chance to stare down a god: inside the British Museum's mesmerising look at Indian religions
Your chance to stare down a god: inside the British Museum's mesmerising look at Indian religions

The Guardian

time15-05-2025

  • The Guardian

Your chance to stare down a god: inside the British Museum's mesmerising look at Indian religions

It's the eyes that stay with you – piercing black discs that seem to vibrate against the intense orange of a goddess's skin. The rest is a blur of silver, yellow and saffron as temple attendants encourage you to move, clockwise, around the murti, or sacred statue. For a moment it's as if this shrine is the one fixed point in the whole city. The goddess in question is Mumba, the patron of Mumbai, her temple at the beating heart of one of the most densely populated areas on Earth. A few streets to the east is the green and white splendour of Minara mosque. To the north is the intricately carved Jain temple of Parshwanath. All around is the noise and commerce of a place that Indians regard as their version of New York and LA combined – 'the city of dreams'. Yet, far from being a godless metropolis, this is a place where religion is very much a going concern. And, as Sushma Jansari, curator of south Asia at the British Museum in London, explains, it's not surprising that the eyes have it. Making direct eye contact, getting a glimpse (or darshan) of the divine, is the whole point. For devotees, staring down a god isn't sacrilegious, but a source of comfort and connection, and a way to ask for help. Back at the British Museum, Jansari has devised Ancient India: Living Traditions, a mesmerising exhibition that explores the roots of the country's major homegrown religions – Hinduism, Jainism and Buddhism. In it, the carvings and statues are all arranged at a height that allows you to meet them face to face: 'You actually look them in the eye.' The power of these encounters can transcend religious boundaries. 'Whatever your faith,' she says, 'when you see a devotional object, it can really affect you.' We emerge from the shrine in Mumbai into a covered courtyard that contains, among the stalls selling vestments and offerings, a giant conch shell on a pedestal, its base spattered with vermilion pigment. This represents Vishnu, says Jansari, one of Hinduism's three principal deities. But, like so many symbols in India, it's a shared one. In Buddhism, the conch stands for the spread of the Buddha's teachings; in Jainism it's the emblem of one of the revered Tirthankaras or teachers. Once you start to notice these common pieces of iconography, which include the lotus, the snake and the lion, you begin to see them everywhere. That is certainly the case at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya, or CSMVS, known until 1998 as the Prince of Wales Museum of Western India. It's an ebullient Edwardian pile in Mumbai's Fort neighbourhood, one of a suite of magnificent buildings that form part of the city's world heritage site. Notable for its Indo-Saracenic style – think the Taj Mahal crossed with London's St Pancras station – it contains hundreds of objects from the dawn of India's early religious history. Two of these are being flown over for the British Museum show, where they will form part of a complex story of influence and assimilation. One reason for the huge overlap between traditions is the environment in which they emerged; the creators of these objects lived incredibly close to nature. In fact, Jansari says, the natural world 'plays the underpinning role. If you think about when [the pieces] were made – from the second and third centuries BCE onwards – the subcontinent is very much an agrarian society. There are some people living in cities, but most people live in the countryside, getting their food and resources from forests and land. For them, nature plays such an outsized role in their everyday lives: if the monsoon rains come, then hooray, they can actually eat. If the rains are too strong and wash away all the crops, they may well starve.' That awesome power is embodied by the figure of the snake, which comes up again and again, representing both the life-giving and destructive aspects of water (they tend to come out when it's wet), and of course, mortal danger. In many of the sculptures they appear as protectors, the same crown of cobras rearing up behind images of the Buddha or Vishnu. And then there are the nature spirits or Yakshas (male) and Yakshis (female). These figures predate the major religions, but 'once you've got those native spirits personified, the artists use that imagery to shape the Jain and Buddhist enlightened teachers and the Hindu gods,' says Jansari. Often tied to trees, some of the earliest Yakshas were more than three metres high. And because they represent capricious nature, 'they're not all lovely, happy, smiling, beatific figures. When you see them, they're kind of grimacing. They're very stern. Imagine walking through the forest and coming across one of these three-metre high figures'. No kidding: at CSMVS the awesome Dvarapala Yaksha guarded one of the Buddhist caves at Pitalkhora. He's a mere 1.6 metres, magnificent in black basalt, his eyes huge, his expression hard to read, but perhaps not entirely benign. Jansari has used the rich British Museum collection, as well as loans from Mumbai, Delhi and elsewhere, to conjure something of this otherworldly atmosphere in London. But when she was first asked by colleagues to put on a show about India, she wasn't sure about the idea. 'As somebody from the south Asian diaspora, I know the normal thing is to do a devotional art exhibition looking at either Jainism or Buddhist art or Hindu art. And I'm not interested in doing something in that very traditional format.' Instead, she was determined 'that these be represented as living traditions', with – and this was crucial – total transparency as to how the objects got there. 'The collecting history strand absolutely had to be not just an add-on, but an integral part of the show.' Why was that so important? 'Nowadays we all want to know how these objects came to be at this museum. Generally speaking, it's presented in quite a binary way: it's either good or it's bad. Whereas actually there is so much more nuance in these stories.' There are carvings from the Buddhist stupa (a dome-shaped shrine) at Amaravati, for example, including an incredible double-sided relief depicting the monument itself. Most of the archaeological material there was destroyed by local workmen in the 18th century, who ground down the limestone to make mortar. East India Company officials then descended, salvaging some material, yes, but also wrecking it further in the process. The pieces they gathered were sent to the company's London HQ, and eventually transferred to Bloomsbury where the British Museum is located. In other words: 'It's complicated.' Jansari also mentions a yaksha donated by a collector who was born in what is now Bangladesh. 'So he had a lot more agency. It's not necessarily this kind of colonial story.' The other thing she insisted on was genuine community involvement. That meant recruiting people from each of the different faiths to discuss those complex collecting histories, and how to treat sacred objects appropriately. As a result of these conversations, the exhibition has avoided any animal products – silk drapes were ditched, and vegan paint used – in accordance with the principle of ahimsa, or non-violence towards all living beings. They also talked about how to respectfully dispose of offerings that devotees might make in the gallery space. 'I don't think it's weird to look on a devotional object that was created for the purpose of veneration, and [see] people having that experience [in the museum].' For Arshna Sanghrajka, a pharmacist and practising Jain from London, being invited to take part was particularly meaningful. 'I was really excited because museums tend to be very arty-farty. You look at things from the past and you admire their splendour and their beauty. And this was quite different, because while, yes, they wanted to do that, they also wanted a connection with the present.' That included recognising that these objects are holy to at least some of the people viewing them. 'Even the way things were being placed, so, for example, not placing an image of a Tirthankara directly on to a plinth. It should be on a slightly raised platform, which is how it would be worshipped in the home or in a temple – even if that block is just one centimetre thick.' What emerged was a model for how the legal owners of objects such as these – the museum's trustees – can effectively widen the definition of whom they belong to. 'The way in which museums are engaging with the public is changing,' says Sanghrajka. 'For an institution which has so much colonial baggage, it's really refreshing to see that they are trying to bring the community back into a sense of moral ownership: like, actually these objects are from your faith, from your community, from your geographical areas. They belong to you just as much as they belong to us. I think that's really special, and I hope that it's not just limited to this exhibition.' Bloomsbury is a long way from Mumbai, but Jansari hopes the bright colours (she is particularly thrilled by the 'hot pink' of the Hindu section), scent of sandalwood and videos made by community members will give a sense of how ancient traditions remain a vivid part of the present, not just in India, but in Britain too. 'A really important thing for me,' she says, 'was to show that this is not all 'foreign stuff' – this is now part of our shared cultural heritage. Here in the UK, we have people from all over the world who practise these faiths, we have these stunning, traditionally built temples and religious buildings. And it's the same with these sacred, devotional images. They've been taken around the world for millennia, and now they've arrived here.' She pauses. 'This idea of moving around, being influenced and influencing others in turn, it's not a weird, modern concept. We've always been doing this. That's what I want people to take away.' Ancient India: Living Traditions is at the British Museum, London, from 22 May to 19 October

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