Page 75 - 2020 Sept 22 Himalayin and Indian Works of Art Sotheby's NYC Asia Week
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9/2/2020 Indian, Himalayan & Southeast Asian Works of Art | Sotheby's
Catalogue Note
Parvati, or Uma as she is referred to in Southern India, is the epitome of beauty. As the tamer of Shiva’s power, she represents the
archetypal image of the female as a symbol of fertility and grace. Originally part of a set, this sculpture was paired with the Shiva
Nataraj, The Lord of Dance, now in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (acc. no. 1987.80.1).
Uma with her elegant sensuality would have stood in conjunction with the perpetual movement of Shiva. While she stands in
restful equipoise, Shiva balances on one leg in continuous motion. Uma, however, does not stand in contrast through stillness.
Instead her left suspended arm with the wrist flicked delicately outward and the right hand swayed upwards as she drops her
weight into the left protruding hip, reflects the interlude of space between movement. The gentle fluidity of Uma, distinct from the
feverous motion of Shiva, lingers with a pacifying effect.
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The 11 Century date of this piece marks it as a relatively early bronze during the Chola Empire, and therefore reflects elements of
the earlier Sembiyan casting style. Like the bronze goddess known as Tripuravijayi, or Victress of the Three Worlds, there is soft
modelling to the breasts, an elasticity to the flesh, a gentleness to the sway and a slenderness to the form, as illustrated in Art of
the Imperial Cholas by Dehejia, New York, 1990, pp. 4-8. Another early example, the Goddess Holding a Lotus (Circa 950),
illustrates the modeled quality of the Sembiyan style and shows a similar treatment in the circular motifs of the dhoti (Cleveland
Museum of Art, acc. no. 1984.2) This also features as a decorative element around the halo of the Metropolitan Shiva (V. Dehejia,
The Sensuous and the Sacred: Chola Bronzes from South India, New York, Seattle and London, 2003, p. 123, cat. 12).
Chola bronzes were actively used as implements of devotion. These bronzes would have been adorned with abundant decoration,
danced through processions, and venerated by the hands of thousands of devotees. They represent the larger context of a
flourishing empire which thrived in its artistic production, wealth and building programs, commencing with the workshop of the
Chola Queen Sembiyan Mahadevi. She bestowed gifts of bronze sculpture to temples, beginning a legacy in the Chola Empire of
producing some of the most superlative examples of this kind.
The piece has also passed through the hands of many well-known collections of Indian and Southeast Asian Art. The late Dr. J. R.
Belmont, an early European collector of Indian sculpture, first acquired this bronze in the 1950s. Part of his collection then passed
into the hands of Christian Humann and was folded into the Pan Asian Collection between 1960-1970. In 1982 part of the Pan Asian
Collection, including this bronze, was acquired by Robert H. Ellsworth, another legendary connoisseur who incorporated the works
into his expansive collection of Chinese, Indian, Himalayan and Southeast Asian Art.
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