Indian Religions: Hindu, Jain and Buddhist Art

Monumental head of Hanuman, India, Kerala, 18th century, wood with pigment, lent by Narendra and Rita Parson, Santa Barbara Museum of Art

TO CELEBRATE ITS 75th anniversary this year, the Santa Barbara Museum of Art (SBMA) has curated an exhibition of Indian religions and their art (on display until August), exploring the relationship between aesthetic expression and devotional practice, or puja, in three important religions which originated in India: Hinduism, Jainism, and Buddhism.

Jain, HIndu, and Buddhist Art

Drawn primarily from SBMA’s collection of Indian art, which has developed in recent years, this exhibition presents 160 works of art in a variety of medium, including paintings and sculpture over the past two millennia, all of which were used for worship in temples and homes to processional bronzes and wooden chariots and explore Indian religions. The  museum, located in southern California, was founded in 1941 with an Asian collection comprising over 2,600 objects in a variety of media, spanning a period of 4,000 years from across the breadth of Asian including the Indian subcontinent.

Puja and Piety in Indian Religions

Puja in Indian religions is the devotional act of worshipping a god, or deified teacher in these three religions through invocations, prayers, songs and rituals. It is through the act of puja that the devotee makes a spiritual connection with the divine in order to seek release from the cycle of rebirth to attain the transcendental state of moksha, nirvana, or enlightenment, usually facilitated by a ritual object in the form of a painting, sculpture, print or even an element from nature. It is these rituals that form the focus of this exhibition with contemporary photographs and videos of private worship and public rituals providing contextualised insights for the classical and popular forms of art on display.

The Vedas and Hindu Art

Hindu belief is based on the four Sanskrit texts, the Vedas, the oldest dating from around 1500-1200 BC. Besides this acknowledgement of the authority of the Vedic tradition there are no other doctrinal bases but there are many diverse schools of thought, gods, goddesses, ascetics, deified heroes each with their own rich and complex mythologies. Contemporary Hinduism is a complex religious system consisting of several different cults based around various gods, mainly the central gods of the Hindu pantheon, Shiva, Vishnu, and the goddess Devi, or Shakti.

Hindu art is primarily devotional in nature with the concept of the divine being represented in a human or superhuman and symbolic manner in the form of gods and goddesses. Hindu sculpture was produced for two reasons, as an image of the god for veneration within a temple or on a domestic altar, or as a carving to cover the exterior walls of temples or portable shrines illustrating the legends of the deities to the devotees.

The proportions, attributes and poses of the Hindu sculptural representations were dictated in the sacred texts, the shilpashstras, or art manuals, which are found in the two texts, the Citralakshana and the Citrasutra section of the Visnudharmottara purana.

The Representation of Shiva

Shiva, literally meaning ‘the auspicious one’, is one of the greatest and also paradoxical Hindu gods as he represents contrasting aspects, an ascetic yet also the husband of Parvati, a dancer, musician and the creator and destroyer of all things. A 12th-century, granite sculpture of Shiva as the Supreme Teacher, Dakshinamurti, from Tamil Nadu is also on display.

Vishnu Sculpture

Vishnu is another important male deity of the Hindu Trinity of Brahma, Shiva and Vishnu who is the preserver and protector of creation. A fine 11th-century sandstone sculpture of Brahma as the eighth incarnation of Vishnu on display was originally carved on a Vishnu temple wall in northern India, for Vishnu had many incarnations which he manifests at different times, with his 10 forms of  incarnations, or Dashavataras, based on the biological evolution of living beings, from acquatic and terrestrial animals like the fish, tortoise, and boar – to human-animal forms and finally human forms.

Conveyance of Emotional Mood

What is unique in Indian art is the conveyance of emotional mood projected by the painting or sculpture called rasa. Art and mythology are linked by rasa and this concept has existed since the writing of the Natyasastra in 5th century BC, the Indian codification on dance, music, dramatic arts and aesthetics in which artists are instructed to use gesture, expression, passion and colour to evoke one of the nine rasa. In the painting of slaying the asura Mahisha, the buffalo demon by the goddess Durga such as the 19th-century painting from the West Bengal, fury or rudra is the dominant rasa, as can be seen in the 19th-century painting of goddess Kali, the manifestation of the great goddess Devi, from Calcutta.

Jain Art and Tirthankara

Unlike Hinduism, which derives its authority from ancient scriptures of unknown origin, Jainism and Buddhism in Indian religions were founded by historical figures. Jainism is based on the teachings of the spiritual teachers of the Jain tradition called Tirthankaras or Jinas, the last and 24th tirthankara called Mahavira. He is considered to have been a contemporary of Shakyamuni Buddha and preached on the path to liberation through ascetic practices and extreme non-violence in India in the 6th century.

The tirthankaras on display include Bahubali standing in the Kayotsanga, body abandonment posture in the form of a 15th-century brass figure, an 18th-century painting of Shvetambara tantric composition with a colossal image of Jina Parshavanatha from Mewar, and a 15th-century brass Digambara altarpiece with Suparshvanatha and four Jinas, Panchatirthika from Karnataka.

Buddhist Art

In Indian religions, Buddhism is based on the teachings, or Four Noble Truths, of the historical Buddha called Shakyamuni who lived from mid-6th century to circa 480 BC, and died aged eighty. The earliest sculptures in the exhibition are fine examples of the first appearances of the Buddha in an aniconic form or a garlanded Bodhi Tree and a birth scene on a fragment of the 2nd-century limestone frieze from a stupa in Nagarjunakonda in Andhra Pradesh.

Images of the Buddha in his earliest human form that are found in Mathura and Gandhara from 1st to 4th centuries are on display, including a stucco Gandharan Buddha head with the physical characteristics called lakshana, ‘the one who has achieved enlightenment’ visible in the cranial bump called ushnisha, which indicates special wisdom, the mark between the eyebrows called urna representing the third eye of supernatural vision, and the small tightly coiled ringlets of hair which symbolises the renunciation of worldliness.

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