Page 132 - September 20th 2021, Indian and Himalayan Art Christie's NYC
P. 132

A FOLIO FROM THE 'TEHRI GARHWAL' GITA GOVINDA






                  The present folio represents an emotional scene from the  Gita   and expert blending of the Basolhi and Guler schools of painting.
                  Govinda,  or “Song of the Herdsman,” a lyrical poem by the   The second, from which this folio derives, was painted by a master
                  twelfth-century East Indian poet Jayadeva. Filled with luminous   of the generation of sons of Manaku and his brother Nainsukh
                  descriptions of the divine, and at times fraught love between   (1710-1778).  The so-called  'Tehri  Garhwal' series  circa  1775, is
                  Krishna and Radha, the  Gita Govinda  had a tremendous impact   an  over  140-page series  celebrated  for  its rich  and  complex
                  on Vaishnav doctrine throughout North and South India, seminal   delineations of emotions and expert execution. This large set was
                  in the development of the bhakti movement of Hinduism, which   greatly influential in the development of the third series completed
                  advocated direct and sincere devotion to a deity, rather than   in 1820, the so-called ‘Lambagraon’ series attributed to the master
                  referring to a Brahmin as an intercessor. The lyrical epic became   Purkhu (active c. 1780-c.1820), circa 1820.
                  especially popular in North India, where it became a beloved
                  subject in Rajput and Pahari painting workshops. Divided into   The ‘Tehri Garhwal’ series, variously referred to as the ‘First
                  12 sargos, or cantos, of mixed length, the narrative is filled with   Kangra Gita Govinda’ or the ‘Second Gita Govinda,’ is considered
                  visual metaphors and hyperbole likening earthly seduction and   by most scholars to be the finest  Gita Govinda  series. M.S.
                  divine union.                               Randhawa remarks, “one of the noblest creations of the Kangra
                                                              artists, this painting is a poem in form and colour, suffused
                  For such enduring imagery, the Gita Govinda, was favored among   with the aroma of love, which is so characteristic of the song of
                  painters and patrons in the Pahari Hills. Three notable  Gita   Jayadeva. Undoubtedly, it is one of the most beautiful of the Gita
                  Govinda series from the region have resonated with scholars and   Govinda  series” (M.S. Randhawa,  Kangra Paintings of the Gita
                  collectors to this day. The first, circa 1730, is a boldly illustrated   Govinda, New Delhi, 1963, p.70; the verso of the present painting
                  150-folio set by the Guler Master Manaku (c. 1700-1760) in the   bears the initials “MSR,” a trademark Randhawa used to mark
                  Basohli style, admired for its evocative colors, rich ornamentation,   paintings he found important).






























                           An Illustration from the ‘Tehri Garhwal’ Gita Govinda: Waiting for her in ‘Love’s Sacred Thicket’; India, Pahari Hills,
                           Kangra, Master of the first generation after Manaku and Nainsukh, circa 1775-1780; 6 ¾ x 10 5/8 in. (17.2 x 27.1 cm);
                           The San Diego Museum of Art, Edwin Binney 3rd Collection, 1990.1270.
   127   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137