Creation of the images of the Buddha was a conspicuous feature of the Mathura School of Art. The Mathura school of art is renowned worldwide for its

Similar documents
Art and Culture 1.6 Post Mauryan Art(Rock-cut caves & Stupas Sculpture- Gandhara Mathura & Amaravati School BY CIVIL JOINT.

Chapter 1 Buddhism (Part 2).

Art of South and Southeast Asia Before 1200

SIXTH century BCE marks the beginning of new

Art & Design Visit Activities. Look & Discuss. Look & Draw. Look & Write. Name

RE Visit Activities. Buddha Trail

Hindu. Beginnings: second century BCE to second century CE. Chapter 2

Non-Western Art History

India and Neighbors. Beginnings of Buddhism. p Buddhist Art

Buddhism. Webster s New Collegiate Dictionary defines religion as the service and adoration of God or a god expressed in forms of worship.

Mauryan art and architecture ; All important facts(upsc PRELIMS 2017,Ancient History )

Asian Religious Art and Architecture. Buddhism and Hinduism

Stupas were burial mounds prevalent in India. The art of Stupas reached its climax during Ashokan period. Stupas belongs to Buddhist tradition.

Architecture: From Ashoka to Gupta 3 rd century BCE to 5 th century CE

( PART : B DESCRIPTIVE )

Cultural Diffusion and the image of the Buddha

Early Buddhism and Gandhara

Introduction to Indian Art An Appreciation Prof. Soumik Nandy Majumdar Department of History of Art Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur

Art of India Ch. 4.2

IES VILATZARA Javier Muro

Features of Gandhara Sculpture Most of the arts were almost always in a blue-gray mica schist, though sometimes in a green phyllite or in stucco, or

SmartPrep.in. Ancient Indian Art and Architecture (200 BC 300 AD) Gandhara, Mathura and Amaravati Schools

TOPIC: ALL OF TERMINOLOGY LIST 3

FWU Journal of Social Sciences, Summer 2017, Vol.11, No.1,

AP Art History Name The Asian World before 1333

Homework B: India and Southeast Asia

A Study of Stylistic Concern Comparing and Contrasting Buddhist and Hindu Sculpture

Pakistan Terre de rencontre L art du Gandhara

CHAPTER 9 ADVANCED PLACEMENT ART HISTORY

The Power of Bodhi: The Miraculous Mergence of the Four Begging Bowls by the Buddha Represented in Gandhara Sculpture

For Immediate Release

THE MEDIUM AND THE MESSAGE COMPARING AND CONTRASTING BUDDHIST SCULPTURE IN VARYING MATERIALS

INDIAN BRONZE SCULPTURE

Lahore University of Management Sciences

Overview. Hindu and Buddhist. p Hindu Art p Buddhist Art

SANGRĀHIKĀ. Year 3, Issue 1, Jan-Mar 2017 e-newsletter on the museums of ASI ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF INDIA

What is a Mudra? Bhumisparsa Mudra Gesture of the Earth Witness

HISTORY AND APPRECIATION OF ART FROM 7th AD TO 12th AD

CHAPTER: IV MATHURA AND GANDHARA SCHOOL OF ART

Context. I. The Stone Age. A. Paleolithic Period (Old Stone Age)

Mauryan Art and Architecture (Palaces Pillars and Stupa)

Chapter 6 Paths to Enlightenment: The Art of India

In the Beginning. Creation Myths Hinduism Buddhism


Varäha-II Cave-Temple

In Terracotta 6101 Indus Valley c.2500bc Pregnant goddess with. animal head 9.5cm Delhi Nat Mus CAT2 ACSAA Slide (c)aaaum

Ancient History Questions: Vedic Age, Jainism & Buddhism

Cornelia Fortunata, Tomi. 2 nd Century CE. Sunday, February 27, 2011

IMAGES OF POWER: NEW KINGDOM EGYPT (Akhenaton and the Amarna Style)

Part 9 TEACHING & CLASSROOM ACTIVITIES

Chapter 18 The Achievements of the Gupta Empire. Why is the period during the Gupta Empire known as the golden age?

Mauryan Empire 321 B.C.E B.C.E.

Indian Identity. Sanskrit promoted as language of educated (minimal)

The only cure for suffering is to follow the Eightfold Path, a middle road between a life devoted to pleasure and a life of harsh self-denial.

Sanchi Last Updated Tuesday, 23 November :30

Art and Culture 1.7 Gupta Age Architecture (Caves Stupas and Sculptures) BY CIVIL JOINT.

NON-WESTERN ART INDIAN, CHINESE, JAPANESE, AFRICAN

SUPERB BRONZES, SCULPTURES, AND PAINTINGS LEAD CHRISTIE S SALE OF INDIAN AND SOUTHEAST ASIAN ART IN MARCH

WINDMILL TOURS AND TRAVELS PVT. LTD. Footsteps Of Buddha

Chapter 18: The Achievement of the Gupta Empire. Learning Target: : I can explain why the Gupta Empire is known as the golden age.

Illustrating Iconography of. Buddhism. Project 3 Stage 3 Palash T Bawankar Sr. Communication Design IDC School of Design IIT Bombay

I SIGNIFICANT FEATURES

Explore Composition and Structure

norton simon museum student preparatory packet indian and southeast asian art

Shop No.89, 1 st floor, Old Rajinder Nagar, New Delhi DAY REVISION PROGRAM DAY-13

CHAPTER - 5. Course of transmission in Buddhist iconography from India to Japan through China and Korea

The earliest inhabitants of India settled along the banks of the

The Iconographic Origin and Development of the Buddhist Triad Format

Contents. Publisher s Note About the Writer/Illustrator

Empires of India and China

Our Ultimate Reality Newsletter 08 August 2010

Exploring Visual Narratives through Thangkas

8/16/2016 (34) Buddhist Monasteries Buddhist art and culture, an introduction A beginner's guide to Asian art and culture Art of Asia Khan Academy

Stupa 3, 1st c., Sanchi, India (photo: Nagarjun Kandukuru, CC: BY 2.0)

South, East, and Southeast Asia 300 B.C.E 1980 C.E.

Ancient Buddhists Created Cave Temples Full of Sculptures

Name: Date: Block: The Beginnings - Tracking early Hinduism

Group 2. Members: Benjamine Antiporda, Andrew Ching, Lorenzo Chua, Angelo Lumbao, Kotaro Ryuto and Jerry Tan.

Religions of South Asia. Hinduism Sikhism Buddhism Jainism

Grade One Understanding Cultural Diversity

Thursday, February 23, 17

The Pillars of Ashoka. Share Tweet

39 The cathedral at Chartres, France was constructed on the same Divine Plan.

20 KUAN YIN WAE. Who is Kuan Yin?

Bell Work. How can religion dictate cultural life in a place?

Winmeen Tnpsc Group 1 & 2 Self Preparation Course History Part 8, 9 8] SUNGA DYNASTY NOTES

From pages GARTERS

BUDDHIST TOUR 7 DAYS. Day 01 : Mumbai Varanasi

OBJECT GUIDE. Sculpture from Asia Gallery 2

UNIT 26 ART AND ARCHITECTURE

EL41 Mindfulness Meditation. What did the Buddha teach?

G*d is a She. VT: Skylight Paths, 2007), A Sermon by the Rev. Dr. Stephanie May First Parish in Wayland May 8, 2016

BUDDHIST STUDIES THE JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF. Volume Number 1 CO-EDITORS-IN-CHIEF

: Delhi Kathmandu. Day 2: In Kathmandu


Manuel Álvarez. Burial of Christ

Storytelling in the Himalayan Region

Ancient India. Section Notes Geography and Early India Origins of Hinduism Origins of Buddhism Indian Empires Indian Achievements

Trinity College Cambridge 9 May Picturing the Christian Life. Vittorio Carpaccio: Meditation on the Dead Christ

Arc India 301 Ajanta Site General View From South Over Wahgora River Gorge ACSAA Slide (C)AAAUM

Transcription:

Creation of the images of the Buddha was a conspicuous feature of the Mathura School of Art. The Mathura school of art is renowned worldwide for its vivacity and assimilative character of Indian themes, a tradition it has maintained till date. Mathura school of art is regarded as an outgrowth of ancient Indian school that flourished as centres of religious art back in 200B.C. The magnificence of Mathura school of art coincided with the rule of the Kushanas under the reign of Kanishka and his successors. The city of Mathura gained prominence under the supremacy of the Kushanas. The fervour of Brahmanism, Jainism and Buddhism is very well distinguished in the paintings of Mathura School of Art. The sculptures of Mathura deserve recognition for creating the earliest, exclusively Indian representations of the Lord Buddha. Mathura school of art draws inspiration from the ancient Indian arts of Bharhut and Sanchi.

Well known sculptures of Mathura School of Art One of the very first images of Buddha to be carved at Mathura is a life-size standing figure found at Sarnath. The statue embodies Sakyamuni standing erect, his feet firmly planted, the right hand raised in the gesture of assurance, and the left is on the hip supporting the folds of his robe. It has been suggested that he is shown as a Bodhisattva, rather than Buddha, since the figure is nude to the waist and wears the characteristic Indian dhoti. The gigantic proportions of this and related figures of the similar kind, its implication of weight and unrestrained volume, as well as the dress, clearly link it to the colossal yaksha statues of the Maurya Period.

The Indian type of seated Lord Buddha is found in numerous early examples from Mathura, such as a specimen from Katra in the Archaeological Museum at Muttra. Mathura School of Art The treatment of the body in broadly conceived planes, with the suggestion of the pneumatic expansion through 'prana', is at once apparent. The face is characterised by its warm and friendly appearance. Again, as in the standing images, it is obvious that the sculptor has translated into stone the various metaphors and he is very careful to signify the distinctive magic-marks on the hands and feet. Another motivating feature of this relief is that it appears to be an early instance of the trinity in Indian art; the attendants most probably may be identified as Indra and Lord Brahma, who later are replaced by Bodhisattvas. It is to be noted that both in the standing figure and the seated examples, the Buddha is represented clad only in a dhoti. It is only in the Kushana reliefs, apparently under Gandharan influence that Sakyamuni is depicted with the monastic robe covering the body; in these the drapery, conceived as a series of string-like ridges is an evident imitation of the classical drapery of the Gandhara School.

A Yakshi is portrayed nude with globular breasts perpetually covered; smooth thighs and the lower garments either revealed as transparent or suggestively parted. The flamboyant and sensuous representations of the Yakshis surpassed anything known in the arts of earlier periods. The provocative portrayal of the beauties bears a similarity to the carvings at Sanchi and Bharhut. Another instance comes from Kosam (Kaushambi) installed in the second year of Kanishka's reign. Two such images dedicated by Friar Bala in the third year of Kanishka's reign come from Sarnath and Sahet- Mahet (Shravasti).

Features of Mathura School of Art The head of the Buddha from Mathura is consistent in the sculptor's self-imposed abstraction. The individual features are integrated into the essentially spheroid mass of the head, and no lingering over precision of anatomical aspect interferes with the key concern for the presentation of the solid volume of the whole. The faces of the statue from the Kushana school at Mathura are characterised by an open, beaming expression, the eyes are fully open, the cheeks round and full, the mouth ample, with lips drawn into a slight smile. This smile is probably the earliest appearance of the only possible device by which the Indian sculptor could indicate the inner contentment and repose of the Buddha's nature. For instance, in the Sarnath statue, although the individual curls are not shown, the hair is indicated as cut short and forming a sort of cap on the skull; the lion-shaped torso, the tapering arms and legs, all correspond to the textual descriptions of the Buddha's superhuman anatomy. In most Mathura images, like the seated figure from Katra, the carvers scrupulously represent the marks of the wheel, 'trisula', etc. on the palms and soles. Mathura School of ArtThe general impression given by the Sarnath statue that is extravagant, weighty, and yet characterised by a certain athletic flexibility, marks the steady improvement of the Indian ideal of physical beauty. The exquisite feminine figures created by the artists of Mathura bear a hallmark of elegance, charm and sophistication. Both in the relation of Jataka stories and events from the life of Buddha the sculptors of Mathura evolved in the manner of presentation, in which the various episodes are stripped of all details of action and setting, so that the event is often typified only by the figure of the Buddha in characteristic pose and mudra. The artists of Mathura used spotted red sandstone as the material for making images and statues. The early images of the Buddha and the Bodhisattva are happy, fleshy figures with little spirituality about them. Statues of Jain Tirthankaras and Brahmanical gods and goddesses were also made. Secular themes were also worked upon.