Page 77 - 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




       During the Chola dynasty, such images were created widely and actively used as part of sacred worship. Temple complexes were
       the foci for religious and civic activity and year-round rituals observed with piety and pomp comprised of dance, song, poetry and
       music. Music itself was considered to lead the devotee into the divine act of worship, darshan, such that by paying homage to the
       deity, in turn, the deity would bestow blessings onto the worshiper. Sculptures such as these cast in bronze, were intended as
       artistic expressions of the essence of the Divine, and these icons were created to be portable in procession so that worshipers
       could partake of the Divine by the act of viewing of the image.


       While the art of metal casting long existed in South India with known portable images dating to the Pallava dynasty and prior, it
       was under Chola rule that the fabrication of such images reached a very high level of technical proficiency resulting in the creation
       of some of the most supreme sculptures ever made in bronze. Cast in the technique of cire perdue, or lost-wax, the figures would
       be encased in clay molds before a molten metal mixture of copper alloy would be poured in through apertures. The mold would
       later be broken to reveal the cooled metal figure, and in doing so, ensuring that no two cast images could be identical. The
       sculptures were then finished with intricate chasing and detailing producing devotional and artistic masterpieces that remain
       unparalleled to this day.

       As the kulanayaka (dynastic patron deity) of the Chola rulers, images of Shiva in varied iconography abound. Two other examples
       of the Lord as Vinadhara are in the collection of the National Museum of Asian Art, Washington, D.C. (acc. no. F1997.28) and the
       Cleveland Museum of Art (acc. no. 1971.117). All similarly show the figure’s chin slightly raised, the lips displaying in a dulcet smile
       and the hips swaying to the right with the left leg bent. The present sculpture bears more resemblance to the figure in the National
       Museum of Art, in the slender contours of the body, the full expanse of the arms, the styling of the matted hair and the patterning
       of the jewelry. Here, Shiva’s body, lithe and agile, seems to drift into a weightless trance from his melodious song.



















































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