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Gupta art

Gupta art is the art of the Gupta Empire, which ruled most of northern India, with its peak between about 300 and 480 CE, surviving in much reduced form until c. 550. The Gupta period is generally regarded as a classic peak and golden age of North Indian art for all the major religious groups.[2] Gupta art is characterized by its "Classical decorum", in contrast to the subsequent Indian medieval art, which "subordinated the figure to the larger religious purpose".[3]

Gupta art
Standing Buddha of the art of Mathura. Gupta Empire period, circa 5th century CE. Rashtrapati Bhavan Presidential Palace, New Delhi, India.
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The three main schools of Gupta art were located in Mathura, Varanasi and Nalanda.[1]

Although painting was evidently widespread, the surviving works are almost all religious sculpture. The period saw the emergence of the iconic carved stone deity in Hindu art, while the production of the Buddha-figure and Jain tirthankara figures continued to expand, the latter often on a very large scale. The traditional main centre of sculpture was Mathura, which continued to flourish, with the art of Gandhara, the centre of Greco-Buddhist art just beyond the northern border of Gupta territory, continuing to exert influence. Other centres emerged during the period, especially at Sarnath. Both Mathura and Sarnath exported sculpture to other parts of northern India.

It is customary to include under "Gupta art" works from areas in north and central India that were not actually under Gupta control, in particular art produced under the Vakataka dynasty who ruled the Deccan c. 250–500.[4] Their region contained very important sites such as the Ajanta Caves and Elephanta Caves, both mostly created in this period, and the Ellora Caves which were probably begun then. Also, although the empire lost its western territories by about 500, the artistic style continued to be used across most of northern India until about 550,[5] and arguably around 650.[6] It was then followed by the "Post-Gupta" period, with (to a reducing extent over time) many similar characteristics; Harle ends this around 950.[7]

In general the style was very consistent across the empire and the other kingdoms where it was used.[8] The vast majority of surviving works are religious sculpture, mostly in stone with some in metal or terracotta, and architecture, mostly in stone with some in brick. The Ajanta Caves are virtually the sole survival from what was evidently a large and sophisticated body of painting,[9] and the very fine coinage the main survivals in metalwork. Gupta India produced both textiles and jewellery, which are only known from representations in sculpture and especially the paintings at Ajanta.[10]

Background

Gupta art was preceded by Kushan art, the art of the Kushan Empire in northern India, which flourished between the 1st and the 4th century CE and blended the tradition of the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara, influenced by Hellenistic artistic canons, and the more Indian art of Mathura.[11] In Western India, as visible in Devnimori, the Western Satraps (1st–4th century CE) developed a refined art, representing a Western Indian artistic tradition that was anterior to the rise of Gupta art, and which may have influenced not only the latter, but also the art of the Ajanta Caves, Sarnath and other places from the 5th century onward.[12][13][14] In central India, the art of the Satavahanas had already created a rich Indian artistic idiom, as visible in Sanchi, which also influenced Gupta art.[14]

 
One of the earliest dated Gupta statues, a Bodhisattva derived from the Kushan style of Mathura art, inscribed "year 64" of the Gupta era, 384 CE, Bodh Gaya.[15]

With the conquests of Samudragupta (r.c. 335/350-375 CE) and Chandragupta II (r.c. 380 – c. 415 CE), the Gupta Empire came to incorporate vast portions of central, northern and northwestern India, as far as the Punjab and the Arabian sea, continuing and expanding on these earlier artistic traditions and developing a unique Gupta style, rising "to heights of sophistication, elegance and glory".[16][17][18][19] Unlike some other Indian dynasties before and after them, and with the exception of the imagery on their coins, the Gupta imperial family did not advertise their relationship to the art produced under them by inscriptions, let alone portraits that have survived.[20]

Early chronology

There are several pieces of statuary from the Gupta period which are inscribed with a date.[21] They work as a benchmark for the chronology and the evolution of style under the Guptas. These Gupta statues are dated from the Gupta era (which starts in 318–319 CE), and sometimes mention the reigning ruler of that time.[21] Besides statuary, coinage is also an important chronological indicator.[22]

Although the Gupta Empire is reckoned to start after King Gupta in the late 3rd century CE, the earliest known and dated sculptures of Gupta art come relatively late, about a century later, after the conquest of northwestern India under Samudragupta. Among the earliest is an inscribed pillar recording the installation of two Shiva Lingas in Mathura in 380 CE under Chandragupta II, Samudragupta's successor.[23] Another rare example is a statue of a seated Bodhisattva in the Mathura style with dhoti and shawl on the left shoulder, coming from Bodh Gaya and dated to "year 64", presumably of the Gupta era, thought to be 384 CE.[15] This type remained a rare occurrence, as in most of the later Gupta statues the Buddha would be shown with the samghati monastic robe covering both shoulders.[15]

Coinage too was a relatively late development, also consecutive to Samugragupta's conquest of the northwest.[24][25][26] The Gupta coinage was initially in imitation of the Kushan types.[27][28][29]

Style

The Gupta style of statuary, especially as seen in the Buddha images, is characterized by several formative traits: ornate halos with floral and gem motifs, clothes with thin diaphanous drapery, specific hair curls, meditative eyes, elongated earlobes, relatively thick lower lips, and often three lines across the neck.[30]

Sculpture

 
Vishnu, 5th century, Mathura

Three main schools of Gupta sculpture are often recognised, based in Mathura, Varanasi/Sarnath[31] and to a lesser extent Nalanda.[32] The distinctively different stones used for sculptures exported from the main centres described below aids identification greatly.[33]

Both Buddhist and Hindu sculpture concentrate on large, often near life-size, figures of the major deities, respectively Buddha, Vishnu and Shiva. The dynasty had a partiality to Vishnu, who now features more prominently, where the Kushan imperial family generally had preferred Shiva. Minor figures such as yakshi, which had been very prominent in preceding periods, are now smaller and less frequently represented, and the crowded scenes illustrating Jataka tales of the Buddha's previous lives are rare.[34] When scenes include one of the major figures and other less important ones, there is a great difference in scale, with the major figures many times larger. This is also the case in representations of incidents from the Buddha's life, which earlier had showed all the figures on the same scale.[35]

The lingam was the central murti in most temples. Some new figures appear, including personifications of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers, not yet worshipped, but placed on either side of entrances; these were "the two great rivers encompassing the Gupta heartland".[36] The main bodhisattva appear prominently in sculpture for the first time,[37] as in the paintings at Ajanta. Buddhist, Hindu and Jain sculpture all show the same style,[38] and there is a "growing likeness of form" between figures from the different religions, which continued after the Gupta period.[5]

The Indian stylistic tradition of representing the body as a series of "smooth, very simplified planes" is continued, though poses, especially in the many standing figures, are subtly tilted and varied, in contrast to the "columnar rigidity" of earlier figures.[39] The detail of facial parts, hair, headgear, jewellery and the haloes behind figures are carved very precisely, giving a pleasing contrast with the emphasis on broad swelling masses in the body.[40] Deities of all the religions are shown in a calm and majestic meditative style; "perhaps it is this all-pervading inwardness that accounts for the unequalled Gupta and post-Gupta ability to communicate higher spiritual states".[5]

Mathura school

 
Standing Buddha, Mathura

The long-established Mathura school continued as one of the main two schools of Gupta Empire art, joined by the school of Varanasi and nearby Sarnath.[1] Mathura sculpture is characterized by its usage of mottled red stone from Karri in the district, and its foreign influences, continuing the traditions of the art of Gandhara and the art of the Kushans.[41]

The art of Mathura continued to become more sophisticated during the Gupta Empire. The pink sandstone sculptures of Mathura evolved during the Gupta period to reach a very high fineness of execution and delicacy in the modeling, displaying calm and serenity. The style become elegant and refined, with a very delicate rendering of the draping and a sort of radiance reinforced by the usage of pink sandstone.[1] Artistic details tend to be less realistic, as seen in the symbolic shell-like curls used to render the hairstyle of the Buddha, and the orante halos around the head of the Buddhas. The art of the Gupta is often considered as the pinnacle of Indian Buddhist art, achieving a beautiful rendering of the Buddhist ideal.[1]

Gupta art is also characterized by an expansion of the Buddhist pantheon, with a high importance given to the Buddha himself and to new deities, including Bodhisattvas such as Avalokitesvara or divinities of Bramanical inspiration, and less focus on the events of the life of the Buddha which were abundantly illustrated through Jataka stories in the art of Bharhut and Sanchi (2nd–1st centuries BCE), or in the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara (1st–4th centuries CE).[42]

The Gupta art of Mathura was very influential throughout northern India, accompanied by a reducing of foreign influences; its style can be seen in Gupta statues to the east in areas as far as Allahabad, with the Mankuwar Buddha, dated to the reign of Kumaragupta I in 448.[43]

There are a number of "problematical" Buddhist and Jain images from Mathura whose dating is uncertain; many are dated with a low year number, but which era is being used is unclear. These may well come from the early Gupta period.[5]

Sarnath school

 
The Dharmachakra Pravartana Buddha at Sarnath, a Gupta statue of the Buddha from Sarnath, Uttar Pradesh, India, last quarter of the 5th century CE. The Buddha is depicted teaching in the lotus position, while making the Dharmacakra mudrā.[47][48]

The Varanasi/ Sarnath style produced mainly Buddhist art, and "Sarnath Buddhas are probably the greatest single achievement of the Indian sculptor", largely setting the representation of the Buddha that was followed in eastern India and South-East Asia for many centuries, and the general representation of the human body in India.[49] A number of dated examples show that the mature style did not develop until 450–475.[50] It is characterized by its yellowish sandstone from the quarries of Chunar, and lacks the foreign influences seen in Mathura.[42] Folds on clothing have disappeared, and the clothing itself is extremely thin, to the point of being transparent. The halo has become large and is often elaborately decorated.[51] The top edge of the eye-socket is very marked, forming a sharply carved edge.[52]

The Sarnath style was the origin of Buddha images in Siam, Cambodia and Java.[53]

Other centres

Nalanda
 
Sultanganj Buddha in copper, 500–700 CE, 2.3 metres tall. Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery.

Gupta sculptural qualities tend to deteriorate with time, as in Nalanda in Bihar in the 6th century BCE, figures become heavier and tend to be made in metal. This evolution suggests a third school of Gupta art in the area Nalanda and Pataliputra, besides the two main centres of Mathura and Vanarasi. The colossal Sultanganj Buddha in copper from the area of Pataliputra is a uniquely large survival from this school, but typical in style.[42] In the same monastery two similar but much smaller (and slightly later) figures in stone were found, one now on display in the British Museum.[57]

Udayagiri Caves/Vidisha

The "first dated sculptures in a fully-fledged early Gupta style" come from the rock-cut Udayagiri Caves and the surrounding area near Vidisha in Madhya Pradesh.[58] Though the caves, all but one Hindu, are "of negligible importance architecturally", around the cave entrances are a number of rock relief panels, some with large deities. They are in a relatively crude and heavy style, but often with a powerful impact; Harle describes the mukhalinga in Cave 4 as "pulsating with psychic power". The most famous is the 7 x 4 metre relief of Vishnu in the form of the giant boar Varaha, raising the earth from the primordial waters, watched by rows of much smaller gods, sages and celestial beings. One cave also has an extremely rare inscription relating a site to the Gupta court, recording the donation of a minister of Candragupta II.[59] The famous Iron pillar of Delhi is thought likely to have been originally set up outside the caves.

Eran
 
Vishnu sleeping, protected by Shesha, Dashavatara Temple, Deogarh

Eran in Madhya Pradesh has a "pillar" or large single column dated 484/5 by an inscription of Buddhagupta, the only standing Gupta example, with two Garuda figures at the top (illustrated below). It had two large Varaha figures outside the ruined Gupta temple. The style of the sculpture is somewhat provincial. Still at the site is a huge and impressive boar on four legs, with no human characteristics, its body covered with rows of small figures representing the sages who clung to the hairs of Varaha to save themselves from the waters. Now moved to the university museum at Sagar is a figure with the same body and pose as that at Udayagiri, "one of the greatest of all Indian sculptures ... nothing can match the figure's air of insolent triumph". Both are dated to the late fifth century.[63]

Others

The surviving sanctuary of the early 6th-century Dashavatara Temple, Deogarh has a typically fine doorway, and large relief panels on the other three walls. These are now external, but would originally gave given on to the covered ambulatory. Though "majestic", these show "the sturdiness of early Gupta sculpture is yielding to a softer, more delicate and ultimately weaker style".[64] The row of men beneath the sleeping Vishnu have "stylized poses, probably imitated from the theatre".[65]

There are also other minor centres of Gupta sculpture, particularly in the areas of Dasapura and Mandasor, where a huge eight-faced mukhalinga (probably early 6th-century) found in the river has been reinstalled in the Pashupatinath Temple, Mandsaur.[66]

The Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara continued a late phase through at least most of the Gupta period, having also been a formative influence.[58]

 
Elephanta Caves, triple-bust (trimurti) of Shiva, 18 feet (5.5 m) tall, c. 550.

Very important rock-cut sites outside the Gupta Empire proper, to the south, are the Ajanta Caves and Elephanta Caves, both mostly created in the Gupta period, and the Ellora Caves which were probably begun around the end of it. As it was mainly restricted to the Gangetic plain, the vast Gupta territories included relatively few rock-cut sites with much sculpture. The later Ajanta style of sculpture is somewhat heavy, but sometimes "awe-inspiring" in the large seated shrine Buddhas, but other smaller figures are often very fine, as is the ornamental carving on columns and door-frames.[67]

When combined with the painted walls, the effect can be considered over-decorated, and lacking "motifs on a larger scale to serve as focal points". The main internal carving was probably completed by 478, though votive figures to the sides of many cave entrances may be later. The Ajanta style is only seen at a few other sites nearby. After work ended there much of the skilled workforce, or their descendants, probably ended up working at Elephanta and then Ellora.[68]

Unlike the series of caves side by side at Ajanta, the main interest at Elephanta is the largest cave, a huge Shiva temple, and above all the colossal triple-bust (trimurti) of Shiva, 18 feet (5.5 m) tall, which "because it is so amazingly skilfully placed in relation to the various external entrances ... receives exactly the amount of light necessary to make it look as if it is emerging from a black void, manifestation from the unmanifest".[69] Also from the Mumbai area, the Parel Relief or (Parel Shiva) is an important late Gupta monolithic relief of Shiva in seven forms.[70]

Terracotta sculpture

The earliest terracottas datable to the Gupta period appear under the Western Satraps at the Buddhist site of Devnimori in Gujarat circa 375–400 CE, representing the southern extension of Gandharan influence to the subcontinent, which persisted locally with the sites of Mīrpur Khās, Śāmalājī or Dhānk, a century before this influence would further extend to Ajanta and Sarnath.[75][76] It has even been suggested that the art of the Western Satraps and Devnimori were at the origin of Gupta material culture, but this remains a subject of debate.[77]

The Gupta period saw the production of many sculptures in terracotta of very fine quality, and they are similar in style across the empire, to an even greater extent than the stone sculpture.[5] Some can still be seen in their original settings on the brick temple at Bhitargaon, where the large relief panels have almost worn away, but various heads and figures survive at higher levels.[78] The very elegant pair of river goddesses excavated from a temple at Ahichchhatra are 1.47 metres high.

Sculpture in metal

The over life-size copper Sultanganj Buddha (2.3 metres tall) is "the only remaining metal statue of any size" from the Gupta period, out of what was at the time probably approximately as numerous a type as stone or stucco statues.[81] There are, however, many much smaller near-identical figures (up to about 50 cm tall), several in American museums. The metal Brahma from Mirpur-Khas is older, but about half the size of the Sultanganj figure. The Jain Akota bronzes and some other finds are much smaller still, probably figures for shrines in well-off homes.[82]

The style of the Sultanganj figure, made by lost-wax casting, is comparable to slightly earlier stone Buddha figures from Sarnath in "the smoothly rounded attenuation of body and limbs" and the very thin, clinging body garment, indicated in the lightest of ways. The figure has "a feeling of animation imparted by the unbalanced stance and the movement suggested by the sweeping silhouette of the enveloping robe".[81]

Coins and metalwork

 
Silver plate with a festival scene

Survivals of decorated secular metalwork are very rare,[83] but a silver plate in the Cleveland Museum of Art shows a crowded festival scene in rather worn relief.[84] There is also a highly decorated object in bronzed iron that is thought to be a weight for an architect's "plummet" or measuring line, now in the British Museum.[85]

The gold coinage of the Guptas, with its many types and infinite varieties and its inscriptions in Sanskrit, are regarded as the finest coins in a purely Indian style.[86] The Gupta Empire produced large numbers of gold coins depicting the Gupta kings performing various rituals, as well as silver coins clearly influenced by those of the earlier Western Satraps by Chandragupta II.[87]

Coinage

Gupta coinage only started with the reign of Samudragupta (335/350-375 CE), or possibly at the end of the reign of his father Chandragupta I, for whom only one coin type in his name is known ("Chandragupta I and his queen"), probably a commemorative issue minted by his son.[88][25][26][89] The coinage of the Gupta Empire was initially derived from the coinage of the Kushan Empire, adopting its weight standard, techniques and designs, following the conquests of Samudragupta in the northwest.[25][26][90] The Guptas even adopted from the Kushans the name of Dinara for their coinage, which ultimately came from the Roman name Denarius aureus.[91][92][93] The imagery on Gupta coins was initially derived from Kushan types, but the features soon became more Indian in both style and subject matter compared to earlier dynasties, where Greco-Roman and Persian styles were mostly followed.[94][95][96]

The usual layout is an obverse with a portrait of the king that is normally full-length, whether standing, seated or riding a horse, and on the reverse a goddess, most often seated on a throne. Often the king is sacrificing. The choice of images can have political meaning, referring to conquests and local tastes; the types often vary between parts of the empire.[97]

Types showing the king hunting and killing various animals: lions (the "lion-slayer" type), tigers and rhinoceros very likely refer to new conquests in the areas where those animals were still found. They may also reflect influence from Sassanian silverware from Persia.[98] The king standing and holding a bow to one side (the "archer" type) was used by at least eight kings; it may have been intended to associate the king with Rama. Profile heads of the king are used on some silver coins for Western provinces added to the empire.[99]

Some gold coins commemorate the Vedic Ashvamedha horse sacrifice ritual, which the Gupta kings practised; these have the sacrificial horse on the obverse and the queen on the reverse.[100] Samudragupta is shown playing a string instrument, wearing huge earrings, but only a simple dhoti. The only type produced under Chandragupta I shows him and his queen standing side by side. The bird Garuda, bearer of Vishnu, is used as a symbol of the dynasty on many silver coins.[101] Some of these were in the past misidentified as fire altars.[102]

The silver coinage of the Guptas was made in imitation of the coinage of the Western Satraps following their overthrow by Chandragupta II, inserting the Gupta peacock symbol on the reverse but retaining traces of the Greek legend and the ruler's portrait on the obverse.[103][104] Kumaragupta and Skandagupta continued with the old type of coins (the Garuda and the Peacock types) and also introduced some other new types.[86] The copper coinage was mostly confined to the era of Chandragupta II and was more original in design. Eight out of the nine types known to have been struck by him have a figure of Garuda and the name of the king on it. The gradual deterioration in design and execution of the gold coins and the disappearance of silver money, bear ample evidence to their curtailed territory.[86]

Architecture

 
Hindu temple of Bhitargaon, late 5th century, but considerably restored.[110].

For reasons that are not entirely clear, for the most part the Gupta period represented a hiatus in Indian rock-cut architecture, with the first wave of construction finishing before the empire was assembled, and the second wave beginning in the late 5th century, just as it was ending. This is the case, for example, at the Ajanta Caves, with an early group made by 220 CE at the latest, and a later one probably all after about 460.[111] Instead, the period has left almost the first surviving free-standing structures in India, in particular the beginnings of Hindu temple architecture. As Milo Beach puts it: "Under the Guptas, India was quick to join the rest of the medieval world in a passion for housing precious objects in stylized architectural frameworks",[112] the "precious objects" being primarily the icons of gods.

The most famous remaining monuments in a broadly Gupta style, the caves at Ajanta, Elephanta, and Ellora (respectively Buddhist, Hindu, and mixed including Jain) were in fact produced under other dynasties in Central India, and in the case of Ellora after the Gupta period, but primarily reflect the monumentality and balance of Guptan style. Ajanta contains by far the most significant survivals of painting from this and the surrounding periods, showing a mature form which had probably had a long development, mainly in painting palaces.[113] The Hindu Udayagiri Caves actually record connections with the dynasty and its ministers,[114] and the Dashavatara Temple at Deogarh is a major temple, one of the earliest to survive, with important sculpture, although it has lost its mandapa and covered ambulatory for parikrama.[115]

Examples of early North Indian Hindu temples that have survived after the Udayagiri Caves in Madhya Pradesh include those at Tigawa (early 5th century),[116] Pataini temple (5th century),[117] Sanchi Temple 17 (similar, but respectively Hindu and Buddhist), Deogarh, Parvati Temple, Nachna (465),[118] Bhitargaon, the largest Gupta brick temple to survive,[119] and Lakshman Brick Temple, Sirpur (600–625 CE). Gop Temple in Gujarat (c. 550 or later) is an oddity, with no surviving close comparator.[120]

There are a number of different broad models, which would continue to be the case for more than a century after the Gupta period, but temples such as Tigawa and Sanchi Temple 17, which are small but massively built stone prostyle buildings with a sanctuary and a columned porch, show the most common basic plan that is elaborated in later temples to the present day. Both of these have flat roofs over the sanctuary, which would become uncommon by about the 8th century. The Mahabodhi Temple, Bhitargaon, Deogarh and Gop already all show high superstructures of different shapes.[121] The Chejarla Kapoteswara temple demonstrates that free-standing chaitya-hall temples with barrel roofs continued to be built, probably with many smaller examples in wood.[122]

Pillars

Pillars with inscriptions were erected, recording the main achievements of Gupta rulers. Whereas the Pillars of Ashoka were cylindrical, smooth and finished with the famous Mauryan polish, Gupta pillars had a rough surface often shaped into geometrical facets.[123]

Painting

 
Ajanta cave 17, frescoes above a lintel

Painting was evidently a major art in Gupta times, and the varied paintings of the Ajanta Caves, which are much the best survivals (almost the only ones), show a very mature style and technique, clearly the result of a well-developed tradition.[124] Indeed, it is recorded that skill in amateur painting, especially portraits, was considered a desirable accomplishment among Gupta elites, including royalty. Ajanta was ruled by the powerful Vakataka dynasty, beyond the territory of the Gupta Empire, but it is thought to closely reflect the metropolitan Gupta style.[125] The other survivals are from the Bagh Caves, now mostly removed to the Gujari Mahal Archaeological Museum in Gwalior Fort, Ellora, and Cave III of the Badami cave temples.[126]

At Ajanta, it is thought that established teams of painters, used to decorating palaces and temples elsewhere, were brought in when required to decorate a cave. Mural paintings survive from both the earlier and later groups of the caves. Several fragments of murals preserved from the earlier caves (Caves 10 and 11) are effectively unique survivals of ancient painting in India from this period, and "show that by Sātavāhana times, if not earlier, the Indian painters had mastered an easy and fluent naturalistic style, dealing with large groups of people in a manner comparable to the reliefs of the Sāñcī toraņa crossbars".[127]

Four of the later caves have large and relatively well-preserved mural paintings which "have come to represent Indian mural painting to the non-specialist",[127] and represent "the great glories not only of Gupta but of all Indian art".[128] They fall into two stylistic groups, with the most famous in Caves 16 and 17, and what used to thought of as later paintings in Caves 1 and 2. However, the widely accepted new chronology proposed by Spink places both groups in the 5th century, probably before 478.[129]

The paintings are in "dry fresco", painted on top of a dry plaster surface rather than into wet plaster.[130] All the paintings appear to be the work of painters supported by discriminating connoisseurship and sophisticated patrons from an urban atmosphere. Unlike much Indian mural painting, compositions are not laid out in horizontal bands like a frieze, but show large scenes spreading in all directions from a single figure or group at the centre.[131] The ceilings are also painted with sophisticated and elaborate decorative motifs, many derived from sculpture.[132] The paintings in cave 1, which according to Spink was commissioned by Harisena himself, concentrate on those Jataka tales which show previous lives of the Buddha as a king, rather than as a deer or elephant or other animal.[133] The Ajanta paintings have seriously deteriorated since they were rediscovered in 1819, and are now mostly hard to appreciate at the site. A number of early attempts to copy them met with misfortune.

Only mural paintings survive, but it is clear from literary sources that portable paintings, including portraits, were common, probably including illustrated manuscripts.[130]

Ajanta paintings

Chronology

The chronology of Gupta art is quite critical to the art history of the region. Fortunately, several statues are precisely dated, based on inscriptions referring to the various rulers of the Gupta Empire, and giving their regnal dates in the Gupta era.

Dated statuary under the Guptas
(319–543 CE)

Final period: Sondani (525 CE)

The sculptures at Sondani and surrounding areas of Mandsaur are a good marker for the final period of Gupta Art, as they were commissioned by Yasodharman (ruled 515 – 545 CE) around 525 CE, in celebration of his victory against the Alchon Hun king Mihirakula.[146][147] This corresponds to the last phase of Gupta cultural and political unity in the subcontinent, and after that point and for the next centuries, Indian politics became extremely fragmented, with the territory being divided between smaller dynasties.[148] The art of Sondani is considered as transitional between Gupta art and the art of Medieval India: it represents "an aesthetic which hovered between the classical decorum of Gupta art on the one hand and on the other the medieval canons which subordinated the figure to the larger religious purpose".[149]

Influences in Southeast Asia

 
Central Thailand, Dvaravati, Mon-Dvaravati style, 7th–9th Century.

Indian art, particularly Gupta and Post-Gupta art from Eastern India, was influential in the development of Buddhist and Hindu art in Southeast Asia from the 6th century CE.[150] The Mon people of the kingdom of Dvaravati in modern Thailand were among the first to adopt Buddhism, and developed a particular style of Buddhist art. Mon-Davarati statues of the Buddha have facial features and hair styles reminiscent of the art of Mathura.[150] In pre-Angkorian Cambodia from the 7th century CE, Harihara statues fusing the characteristics of Shiva and Vishnu are known.[150]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Mookerji, 142
  2. ^ Rowland's chapter 15 is called "The Golden Age: The Gupta Period; Harle, 88
  3. ^ Williams, Joanna (1972). "The Sculpture of Mandasor" (PDF). Archives of Asian Art. 26: 64. ISSN 0066-6637. JSTOR 20111042.
  4. ^ Harle, 118
  5. ^ a b c d e Harle, 89
  6. ^ Rowland, 215
  7. ^ Harle, 199
  8. ^ Harle, 89; Rowland, 216
  9. ^ Harle, 88, 355–361
  10. ^ Rowland, 252–253
  11. ^ Stokstad, Marilyn; Cothren, Michael W. (2013). Art History (5th Edition) Chapter 10: Art Of South And Southeast Asia Before 1200. Pearson. pp. 306–308. ISBN 978-0205873487.
  12. ^ Schastok, Sara L. (1985). The Śāmalājī Sculptures and 6th Century Art in Western India. BRILL. pp. 23–31. ISBN 978-9004069411.
  13. ^ a b c The Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies, Volume 4 1981 Number I An Exceptional Group of Painted Buddha Figures at Ajanṭā, p.97 and Note 2
  14. ^ a b "Gupta art in north India of the fifth century did receive the heritage of the Mathura as well as Ksatrapa-Satavahana arts." in Pal, Pratapaditya (1972). Aspects of Indian Art: Papers Presented in a Symposium at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, October, 1970. Brill Archive. p. 47. ISBN 9789004036253.
  15. ^ a b c d Rhi, Ju-Hyung (1994). "From Bodhisattva to Buddha: The Beginning of Iconic Representation in Buddhist Art". Artibus Asiae. 54 (3/4): 223. doi:10.2307/3250056. ISSN 0004-3648. JSTOR 3250056.
  16. ^ Duiker, William J.; Spielvogel, Jackson J. (2015). World History. Cengage Learning. p. 279. ISBN 9781305537781.
  17. ^ Mookerji, Radhakumud (1997). The Gupta Empire. Motilal Banarsidass Publ. p. 143. ISBN 9788120804401.
  18. ^ Gokhale, Balkrishna Govind (1995). Ancient India: History and Culture. Popular Prakashan. pp. 171–173. ISBN 9788171546947.
  19. ^ Lowenstein, Tom (2012). The Civilization of Ancient India and Southeast Asia. The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc. p. 53. ISBN 9781448885077.
  20. ^ Harle, 88
  21. ^ a b Agrawal, Ashvini (1989). Rise and Fall of the Imperial Guptas. Motilal Banarsidass Publ. pp. 98–100. ISBN 978-81-208-0592-7.
  22. ^ Pal, 69
  23. ^ "Collections-Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds". vmis.in. American Institute of Indian Studies.
  24. ^ Altekar, A. s (1957). Coinage Of The Gupta Empire. p. 39.
  25. ^ a b c Mookerji, Radhakumud (1997). The Gupta Empire. Motilal Banarsidass Publ. p. 30. ISBN 9788120804401.
  26. ^ a b c Higham, Charles (2014). Encyclopedia of Ancient Asian Civilizations. Infobase Publishing. p. 82. ISBN 9781438109961.
  27. ^ "It was his conquests which brought to him the gold utilized in his coinage and also the knowledge of its technique acquired from his acquaintance with Kushan (eastern Punjab) coins. His earliest coins began as imitations of these Kushan coins, and of their foreign features which were gradually replaced by Indian features in his later coins." in Mookerji, Radhakumud (1997). The Gupta Empire. Motilal Banarsidass Publ. p. 30. ISBN 9788120804401.
  28. ^ Pal, 78
  29. ^ Art, Los Angeles County Museum of; Pal, Pratapaditya (1986). Indian Sculpture: Circa 500 B.C.-A.D. 700. University of California Press. p. 73. ISBN 9780520059917.
  30. ^ Ishikawa, Ken (2019). "More Gandhāra than Mathurā: substantial and persistent Gandhāran influences provincialized in the Buddhist material culture of Gujarat and beyond, c. AD 400–550" in "The Global Connections of Gandhāran Art". p. 166. "However, all the Gupta Buddha images show one or more formative-Gupta characteristics: the ornamentation of the halo with floral and gem motifs, the garments with diaphanous drapery, hair curls, meditative eyes, elongated earlobes, the pronounced lower lip and/or three lines across his neck (Miyaji 1980: 16).
  31. ^ Asher, Frederick M. (2003), "Sarnath", Oxford Art Online, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.t076054, ISBN 978-1-884446-05-4, retrieved 2020-12-25
  32. ^ Mookerji, 1, 143
  33. ^ Harle, 89; Rowland, 216; Mookerji, 143
  34. ^ Harle, 87–88
  35. ^ Rowland, 234
  36. ^ Harle, 87–88, 88 quoted
  37. ^ Rowland, 235
  38. ^ Rowland, 232
  39. ^ Rowland, 233
  40. ^ Rowland, 230–233, 232 and 233 quoted
  41. ^ Rowland, 229–232; Mookerji, 143
  42. ^ a b c d e Mookerji, 143
  43. ^ Mookerji, 142–143
  44. ^ "Kushana-Gupta transitional period" per Mathura Museum label, visible on the photograph.
  45. ^ "Collections-Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds". vmis.in. American Institute of Indian Studies.
  46. ^ For English summary, see page 80 Schmid, Charlotte (1997). "Les Vaikuṇṭha gupta de Mathura : Viṣṇu ou Kṛṣṇa?". Arts Asiatiques. 52: 60–88. doi:10.3406/arasi.1997.1401.
  47. ^ Rowland, 234–235; Harle, 109–110
  48. ^ Harle, James C. (January 1994). The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent. Yale University Press. p. 109. ISBN 978-0-300-06217-5.
  49. ^ Harle, 107–110, 107 quoted
  50. ^ Harle, 110
  51. ^ Rowland, 232–237;
  52. ^ Harle, 89–90
  53. ^ Harle, 109–110; Rowland, 235
  54. ^ Fleet, John Faithfull (1960). Inscriptions Of The Early Gupta Kings And Their Successors. p. 47.
  55. ^ "Mankuwar Buddha Image Inscription of the Time of Kumaragupta I siddham". siddham.uk.
  56. ^ "Collections-Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds". vmis.in. American Institute of Indian Studies.
  57. ^ British Museum page[permanent dead link]
  58. ^ a b Harle, 92
  59. ^ Harle, 92–97, 93 quoted
  60. ^ Harle, 93
  61. ^ Curta, Florin; Holt, Andrew (28 November 2016). Great Events in Religion: An Encyclopedia of Pivotal Events in Religious History [3 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 271. ISBN 978-1-61069-566-4.
  62. ^ BECKER, CATHERINE (2010). "Not Your Average Boar: The Colossal Varāha at Erāṇ, an Iconographic Innovation". Artibus Asiae. 70 (1): 127. ISSN 0004-3648. JSTOR 20801634.
  63. ^ Harle, 97–100, 99–100 quoted
  64. ^ Harle, 113
  65. ^ Harle, 113–114
  66. ^ Mookerji, 144; Harle, 114
  67. ^ Harle, 118–120 (120 quoted), 122–124
  68. ^ Harle, 122
  69. ^ Harle, 124
  70. ^ Harle, 124
  71. ^ "Mother Goddess". Cleveland Museum of Art. 31 October 2018.
  72. ^ India, Rajasthan, Tanesara-Mahadeva, Gupta Period. "Matrika from Tanesara". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  73. ^ "Mother Goddess". Cleveland Museum of Art. 31 October 2018.
  74. ^ Harle, James C. (January 1994). The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent. Yale University Press. p. 115. ISBN 978-0-300-06217-5.
  75. ^ Ishikawa, Ken (2020). "More Gandhāra than Mathurā: substantial and persistent Gandhāran influences provincialized in the Buddhist material culture of Gujarat and beyond, c. AD 400–550" in "The Global Connections of Gandhāran Art" (PDF). Archaeopress Archaeology. pp. 156–157. Furthermore, I will trace the waves of Gandhāran influences observed at Devnīmorī, which within, or after, a century or so eventually reached Sārnāth and Ajaṇṭā and locally persisted at Śāmalājī in north Gujarat, Dhānk in Saurashtra in India, and Mīrpur Khās in Sindh in Pakistan.
  76. ^ Ishikawa, Ken (January 2020). The Global Connections of Gandhāran Art. p. 168. Overall, the early Gupta Jain tīrthaṅkara images from Vidiśā are regarded as anticipating, together with the Bodh Gayā Buddha/Bodhisattva image and fully-fledged Gupta-style buddha images at Devnīmorī soon after, the fully-fledged/mature Gupta Buddha images at Mathurā and Sārnāth that developed during the following fifth century AD.
  77. ^ Ishikawa, Ken (2019). "More Gandhāra than Mathurā: substantial and persistent Gandhāran influences provincialized in the Buddhist material culture of Gujarat and beyond, c. AD 400–550" in "The Global Connections of Gandhāran Art". pp. 156ff. Even so, the idea that Devnīmorī or the Western Kṣatrapas were the progenitor of Gupta material culture has long been a subject of debate (Williams 1982 58-9). Although the role of western India in the formation of pan-Indian Gupta material culture is a notoriously problematic issue, we might further contextualize Devnīmorī by reconsidering the extent of the late Gandhāran influence as well as pre-existing material culture of Gujarat.
  78. ^ Harle, 115
  79. ^ Indian Art. Prince of Wales Museum of Western India. 1964. pp. 2–4. The terracotta figures of Mirpur Khas represent the Gupta idiom as it flourished in Sindh. (...) In the terracottas of Mirpur Khas, of which the Museum has a most representative collection, one may see the synthesis of Gandhara and Gupta traditions . Here the old sacrosanct forms of Gandhara are moulded in the Gupta character of nobility , restraint and spirituality and the result is very pleasing. The figures of the Buddha from Mirpur Khas show transformation from the Gandhara to Gupta idiom , which the figures of the donor and Kubera show well developed Gupta types.
  80. ^ Harle, James C. (January 1994). The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent. Yale University Press. p. 117. ISBN 978-0-300-06217-5.
  81. ^ a b Rowland, 237
  82. ^ Rowland, 237–239
  83. ^ Rowland, 253
  84. ^ "Plate with a Scene of Revelry", Cleveland Museum of Art
  85. ^ Rowland, 253–254
  86. ^ a b c The Coins Of India, by Brown, C.J. p.13-20
  87. ^ Allan, J. & Stern, S. M. (2008), coin, Encyclopædia Britannica.
  88. ^ Altekar, A. s (1957). Coinage Of The Gupta Empire. p. 39.
  89. ^ Brown, C. J. (1987). The Coins of India. Asian Educational Services. p. 41. ISBN 9788120603455.
  90. ^ Sen, Sudipta (2019). Ganges: The Many Pasts of an Indian River. Yale University Press. p. 205. ISBN 9780300119169.
  91. ^ "Known by the term Dinars in early Gupta inscriptions, their gold coinage was based on the weight standard of the Kushans i.e. 8 gms/120 grains. It was replaced in the time of Skandagupta by a standard of 80 ratis or 144 grains" Vanaja, R. (1983). Indian Coinage. National Museum.
  92. ^ Mookerji, Radhakumud (1997). The Gupta Empire. Motilal Banarsidass Publ. p. 31. ISBN 9788120804401.
  93. ^ Gupta inscriptions using the term "Dinara" for money: No 5-9, 62, 64 in Fleet, John Faithfull (1960). Inscriptions Of The Early Gupta Kings And Their Successors.
  94. ^ "It was his conquests which brought to him the gold utilized in his coinage and also the knowledge of its technique acquired from his acquaintance with Kushan (eastern Punjab) coins. His earliest coins began as imitations of these Kushan coins, and of their foreign features which were gradually replaced by Indian features in his later coins." in Mookerji, Radhakumud (1997). The Gupta Empire. Motilal Banarsidass Publ. p. 30. ISBN 9788120804401.
  95. ^ Pal, 78
  96. ^ Art, Los Angeles County Museum of; Pal, Pratapaditya (1986). Indian Sculpture: Circa 500 B.C.-A.D. 700. University of California Press. p. 73. ISBN 9780520059917.
  97. ^ Mookerji, 139–141; Bajpai, 121; Pal, 78–80
  98. ^ Sircar, 215–217; Pal, 74–75. The alternative explanation is that these animals were still more widespread than is usually thought.
  99. ^ Mookerji, 139–141; Pal, 73–74
  100. ^ Glucklich, 111–113; Mookerji, 140; Pal, 79–80 suggests instead the female figure may represent Vijaya, the goddess of victory.
  101. ^ Mookerji, 139–141; Pal, 73–75
  102. ^ Bajpai, 121–124
  103. ^ Prasanna Rao Bandela (2003). Coin splendour: a journey into the past. Abhinav Publications. pp. 112–. ISBN 978-81-7017-427-1. Retrieved 21 November 2011.
  104. ^ "Evidence of the conquest of Saurastra during the reign of Chandragupta II is to be seen in his rare silver coins which are more directly imitated from those of the Western Satraps... they retain some traces of the old inscriptions in Greek characters, while on the reverse, they substitute the Gupta type (a peacock) for the chaitya with crescent and star." in Rapson "A catalogue of Indian coins in the British Museum. The Andhras etc...", p. cli
  105. ^ a b Houben, Jan E. M.; Kooij, Karel Rijk van (1999). Violence Denied: Violence, Non-Violence and the Rationalization of Violence in South Asian Cultural History. BRILL. p. 128. ISBN 978-90-04-11344-2.
  106. ^ a b Ganguly, Dilip Kumar (1984). History and Historians in Ancient India. Abhinav Publications. p. 152. ISBN 978-0-391-03250-7.
  107. ^ "Evidence of the conquest of Saurastra during the reign of Chandragupta II is to be seen in his rare silver coins which are more directly imitated from those of the Western Satraps... they retain some traces of the old inscriptions in Greek characters, while on the reverse, they substitute the Gupta type ... for the chaitya with crescent and star." in Rapson "A catalogue of Indian coins in the British Museum. The Andhras etc.", p.cli
  108. ^ Curta, Florin; Holt, Andrew (2016). Great Events in Religion: An Encyclopedia of Pivotal Events in Religious History [3 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 271. ISBN 978-1-61069-566-4.
  109. ^ Curta, Florin; Holt, Andrew (28 November 2016). Great Events in Religion: An Encyclopedia of Pivotal Events in Religious History [3 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 271. ISBN 978-1-61069-566-4.
  110. ^ Harle, James C. (January 1994). The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent. Yale University Press. p. 116. ISBN 978-0-300-06217-5.
  111. ^ Ajanta chronology is still under discussion, but this is the view of Spink, accepted by many.
  112. ^ Beach, Milo, Steps to Water: The Ancient Stepwells of India, (Photographs by Morna Livingston), p. 25, 2002, Princeton Architectural Press, ISBN 1568983247, 9781568983240, google books
  113. ^ J.C. Harle 1994, pp. 118–22, 123–26, 129–35.
  114. ^ J.C. Harle 1994, pp. 92–97.
  115. ^ Harle, 113–114; see also site entries in Michell (1990)
  116. ^ Michell (1990), 192
  117. ^ Cunningham, Alexander (1879). Report of a Tour in the Central Provinces in 1873-74 and 1874-75. Archaeological Survey of India. Vol. 9. Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing. p. 31.
  118. ^ Michael Meister (1987), Hindu Temple, in The Encyclopedia of Religion, editor: Mircea Eliade, Volume 14, Macmillan, ISBN 0-02-909850-5, page 370
  119. ^ Michell (1990), 157; Michell (1988), 96
  120. ^ Harle, 111–113, 136–138; Michell (1988), 90, 96–98; see also site entries in Michell (1990)
  121. ^ Harle, 111–113; Michell (1988), 94–98
  122. ^ Harle, 175
  123. ^ "Gupta – artistes built it with the rough surface and with the different shapes of square, octagonal and hexagonal. They decorated the pillars with the meandering creepers, flowers of blue and red lotuses, pitchers and the pattern of leogryph." Sudhi, Padma (1993). Gupta Art, a Study from Aesthetic and Canonical Norms. Galaxy Publications. p. 120. ISBN 978-81-7200-007-3.
  124. ^ Honour, Hugh; Fleming, John (2005). A World History of Art. Laurence King Publishing. p. 244. ISBN 978-1-85669-451-3.
  125. ^ Harle, James C. (January 1994). The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent. Yale University Press. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-300-06217-5.
  126. ^ Harle, 355, 361
  127. ^ a b Harle, 355
  128. ^ Harle, 356
  129. ^ Harle, 355–361; Spink
  130. ^ a b Harle, 361
  131. ^ Harle, 359
  132. ^ Harle, 355–361
  133. ^ Spink 2008
  134. ^ "Mahajanaka Jataka: Ajanta Cave 1". University of Minnesota.
  135. ^ a b Benoy Behl (2004), Ajanta, the fountainhead, Frontline, Volume 21, Issue 20
  136. ^ Gupte & Mahajan 1962, pp. 32–33, Plate XI.
  137. ^ Gupte & Mahajan 1962, pp. 8–9, Plate IV.
  138. ^ "Collections-Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds". vmis.in. American Institute of Indian Studies.
  139. ^ Curta, Florin; Holt, Andrew (28 November 2016). Great Events in Religion: An Encyclopedia of Pivotal Events in Religious History [3 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 271. ISBN 978-1-61069-566-4.
  140. ^ "Collections-Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds". vmis.in. American Institute of Indian Studies.
  141. ^ Fleet, John Faithfull (1960). Inscriptions Of The Early Gupta Kings And Their Successors. p. 47.
  142. ^ "Mankuwar Buddha Image Inscription of the Time of Kumaragupta I siddham". siddham.uk.
  143. ^ "Collections-Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds". vmis.in. American Institute of Indian Studies.
  144. ^ "Collections-Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds". vmis.in. American Institute of Indian Studies.
  145. ^ Majumdar, B. (1937). Guide to Sarnath. p. 89.
  146. ^ . Archived from the original on 2019-11-01. Retrieved 2021-12-18.
  147. ^ Williams, Joanna (1972). "The Sculpture of Mandasor" (PDF). Archives of Asian Art. 26: 63. ISSN 0066-6637. JSTOR 20111042.
  148. ^ "The reign of Yasodharman thus forms an important dividing point between the period of the imperial Guptas, whom he emulated, and the following centuries, when India fell into a kaleidoscopic confusion of shifting smaller dynasties" in Williams, Joanna (1972). "The Sculpture of Mandasor" (PDF). Archives of Asian Art. 26: 52. ISSN 0066-6637. JSTOR 20111042.
  149. ^ Williams, Joanna (1972). "The Sculpture of Mandasor" (PDF). Archives of Asian Art. 26: 64. ISSN 0066-6637. JSTOR 20111042.
  150. ^ a b c Stokstad, Marilyn; Cothren, Michael W. (2013). Art History (5th Edition) Chapter 10: Art Of South And Southeast Asia Before 1200. Pearson. pp. 323–325. ISBN 978-0205873487.

References

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  • Pal, Pratapaditya, Indian Sculpture: Circa 500 B.C.-A.D. 700, Volume 1 of Indian Sculpture: A Catalogue of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art Collection, 1986, Los Angeles County Museum of Art/University of California Press, ISBN 0520059913, 9780520059917, google books
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  • Spink, Walter M. (2008), , archived from the original on 2021-06-18]

gupta, gupta, empire, which, ruled, most, northern, india, with, peak, between, about, surviving, much, reduced, form, until, gupta, period, generally, regarded, classic, peak, golden, north, indian, major, religious, groups, characterized, classical, decorum,. Gupta art is the art of the Gupta Empire which ruled most of northern India with its peak between about 300 and 480 CE surviving in much reduced form until c 550 The Gupta period is generally regarded as a classic peak and golden age of North Indian art for all the major religious groups 2 Gupta art is characterized by its Classical decorum in contrast to the subsequent Indian medieval art which subordinated the figure to the larger religious purpose 3 Gupta artStanding Buddha of the art of Mathura Gupta Empire period circa 5th century CE Rashtrapati Bhavan Presidential Palace New Delhi India MathuraVaranasiNalandaAjantaUdayagiriclass notpageimage The three main schools of Gupta art were located in Mathura Varanasi and Nalanda 1 Although painting was evidently widespread the surviving works are almost all religious sculpture The period saw the emergence of the iconic carved stone deity in Hindu art while the production of the Buddha figure and Jain tirthankara figures continued to expand the latter often on a very large scale The traditional main centre of sculpture was Mathura which continued to flourish with the art of Gandhara the centre of Greco Buddhist art just beyond the northern border of Gupta territory continuing to exert influence Other centres emerged during the period especially at Sarnath Both Mathura and Sarnath exported sculpture to other parts of northern India It is customary to include under Gupta art works from areas in north and central India that were not actually under Gupta control in particular art produced under the Vakataka dynasty who ruled the Deccan c 250 500 4 Their region contained very important sites such as the Ajanta Caves and Elephanta Caves both mostly created in this period and the Ellora Caves which were probably begun then Also although the empire lost its western territories by about 500 the artistic style continued to be used across most of northern India until about 550 5 and arguably around 650 6 It was then followed by the Post Gupta period with to a reducing extent over time many similar characteristics Harle ends this around 950 7 In general the style was very consistent across the empire and the other kingdoms where it was used 8 The vast majority of surviving works are religious sculpture mostly in stone with some in metal or terracotta and architecture mostly in stone with some in brick The Ajanta Caves are virtually the sole survival from what was evidently a large and sophisticated body of painting 9 and the very fine coinage the main survivals in metalwork Gupta India produced both textiles and jewellery which are only known from representations in sculpture and especially the paintings at Ajanta 10 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Early chronology 1 2 Style 2 Sculpture 2 1 Mathura school 2 2 Sarnath school 2 3 Other centres 3 Terracotta sculpture 4 Sculpture in metal 5 Coins and metalwork 5 1 Coinage 6 Architecture 6 1 Pillars 7 Painting 8 Chronology 8 1 Final period Sondani 525 CE 9 Influences in Southeast Asia 10 See also 11 Notes 12 ReferencesBackground EditGupta art was preceded by Kushan art the art of the Kushan Empire in northern India which flourished between the 1st and the 4th century CE and blended the tradition of the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara influenced by Hellenistic artistic canons and the more Indian art of Mathura 11 In Western India as visible in Devnimori the Western Satraps 1st 4th century CE developed a refined art representing a Western Indian artistic tradition that was anterior to the rise of Gupta art and which may have influenced not only the latter but also the art of the Ajanta Caves Sarnath and other places from the 5th century onward 12 13 14 In central India the art of the Satavahanas had already created a rich Indian artistic idiom as visible in Sanchi which also influenced Gupta art 14 One of the earliest dated Gupta statues a Bodhisattva derived from the Kushan style of Mathura art inscribed year 64 of the Gupta era 384 CE Bodh Gaya 15 With the conquests of Samudragupta r c 335 350 375 CE and Chandragupta II r c 380 c 415 CE the Gupta Empire came to incorporate vast portions of central northern and northwestern India as far as the Punjab and the Arabian sea continuing and expanding on these earlier artistic traditions and developing a unique Gupta style rising to heights of sophistication elegance and glory 16 17 18 19 Unlike some other Indian dynasties before and after them and with the exception of the imagery on their coins the Gupta imperial family did not advertise their relationship to the art produced under them by inscriptions let alone portraits that have survived 20 Early chronology Edit There are several pieces of statuary from the Gupta period which are inscribed with a date 21 They work as a benchmark for the chronology and the evolution of style under the Guptas These Gupta statues are dated from the Gupta era which starts in 318 319 CE and sometimes mention the reigning ruler of that time 21 Besides statuary coinage is also an important chronological indicator 22 Although the Gupta Empire is reckoned to start after King Gupta in the late 3rd century CE the earliest known and dated sculptures of Gupta art come relatively late about a century later after the conquest of northwestern India under Samudragupta Among the earliest is an inscribed pillar recording the installation of two Shiva Lingas in Mathura in 380 CE under Chandragupta II Samudragupta s successor 23 Another rare example is a statue of a seated Bodhisattva in the Mathura style with dhoti and shawl on the left shoulder coming from Bodh Gaya and dated to year 64 presumably of the Gupta era thought to be 384 CE 15 This type remained a rare occurrence as in most of the later Gupta statues the Buddha would be shown with the samghati monastic robe covering both shoulders 15 Coinage too was a relatively late development also consecutive to Samugragupta s conquest of the northwest 24 25 26 The Gupta coinage was initially in imitation of the Kushan types 27 28 29 Style Edit The Gupta style of statuary especially as seen in the Buddha images is characterized by several formative traits ornate halos with floral and gem motifs clothes with thin diaphanous drapery specific hair curls meditative eyes elongated earlobes relatively thick lower lips and often three lines across the neck 30 Sculpture Edit Vishnu 5th century Mathura Three main schools of Gupta sculpture are often recognised based in Mathura Varanasi Sarnath 31 and to a lesser extent Nalanda 32 The distinctively different stones used for sculptures exported from the main centres described below aids identification greatly 33 Both Buddhist and Hindu sculpture concentrate on large often near life size figures of the major deities respectively Buddha Vishnu and Shiva The dynasty had a partiality to Vishnu who now features more prominently where the Kushan imperial family generally had preferred Shiva Minor figures such as yakshi which had been very prominent in preceding periods are now smaller and less frequently represented and the crowded scenes illustrating Jataka tales of the Buddha s previous lives are rare 34 When scenes include one of the major figures and other less important ones there is a great difference in scale with the major figures many times larger This is also the case in representations of incidents from the Buddha s life which earlier had showed all the figures on the same scale 35 The lingam was the central murti in most temples Some new figures appear including personifications of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers not yet worshipped but placed on either side of entrances these were the two great rivers encompassing the Gupta heartland 36 The main bodhisattva appear prominently in sculpture for the first time 37 as in the paintings at Ajanta Buddhist Hindu and Jain sculpture all show the same style 38 and there is a growing likeness of form between figures from the different religions which continued after the Gupta period 5 The Indian stylistic tradition of representing the body as a series of smooth very simplified planes is continued though poses especially in the many standing figures are subtly tilted and varied in contrast to the columnar rigidity of earlier figures 39 The detail of facial parts hair headgear jewellery and the haloes behind figures are carved very precisely giving a pleasing contrast with the emphasis on broad swelling masses in the body 40 Deities of all the religions are shown in a calm and majestic meditative style perhaps it is this all pervading inwardness that accounts for the unequalled Gupta and post Gupta ability to communicate higher spiritual states 5 Mathura school Edit Standing Buddha Mathura Main article Mathura art The long established Mathura school continued as one of the main two schools of Gupta Empire art joined by the school of Varanasi and nearby Sarnath 1 Mathura sculpture is characterized by its usage of mottled red stone from Karri in the district and its foreign influences continuing the traditions of the art of Gandhara and the art of the Kushans 41 The art of Mathura continued to become more sophisticated during the Gupta Empire The pink sandstone sculptures of Mathura evolved during the Gupta period to reach a very high fineness of execution and delicacy in the modeling displaying calm and serenity The style become elegant and refined with a very delicate rendering of the draping and a sort of radiance reinforced by the usage of pink sandstone 1 Artistic details tend to be less realistic as seen in the symbolic shell like curls used to render the hairstyle of the Buddha and the orante halos around the head of the Buddhas The art of the Gupta is often considered as the pinnacle of Indian Buddhist art achieving a beautiful rendering of the Buddhist ideal 1 Gupta art is also characterized by an expansion of the Buddhist pantheon with a high importance given to the Buddha himself and to new deities including Bodhisattvas such as Avalokitesvara or divinities of Bramanical inspiration and less focus on the events of the life of the Buddha which were abundantly illustrated through Jataka stories in the art of Bharhut and Sanchi 2nd 1st centuries BCE or in the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara 1st 4th centuries CE 42 The Gupta art of Mathura was very influential throughout northern India accompanied by a reducing of foreign influences its style can be seen in Gupta statues to the east in areas as far as Allahabad with the Mankuwar Buddha dated to the reign of Kumaragupta I in 448 43 There are a number of problematical Buddhist and Jain images from Mathura whose dating is uncertain many are dated with a low year number but which era is being used is unclear These may well come from the early Gupta period 5 Buddha in Abhaya Mudra Kushana Gupta transitional period Circa 3rd 4th century Mathura 44 Standing Buddha inscribed Gupta Era year 115 434 CE Mathura 45 Head of a Buddha 6th century A relief of the Trivikrama three strides of Vishnu in the art of Mathura during the Gupta period Vishnu in three incarnations Chaturvyuha Vishnu himself or Vasudeva Krishna in human form Varaha as a boar Narasimha as a lion Mathura mid 5th century CE Boston Museum 46 Vishnu statue 5th century Mathura Seated Jain Tirthankara circa 5th Century CE Mathura Sarnath school Edit The Dharmachakra Pravartana Buddha at Sarnath a Gupta statue of the Buddha from Sarnath Uttar Pradesh India last quarter of the 5th century CE The Buddha is depicted teaching in the lotus position while making the Dharmacakra mudra 47 48 The Varanasi Sarnath style produced mainly Buddhist art and Sarnath Buddhas are probably the greatest single achievement of the Indian sculptor largely setting the representation of the Buddha that was followed in eastern India and South East Asia for many centuries and the general representation of the human body in India 49 A number of dated examples show that the mature style did not develop until 450 475 50 It is characterized by its yellowish sandstone from the quarries of Chunar and lacks the foreign influences seen in Mathura 42 Folds on clothing have disappeared and the clothing itself is extremely thin to the point of being transparent The halo has become large and is often elaborately decorated 51 The top edge of the eye socket is very marked forming a sharply carved edge 52 The Sarnath style was the origin of Buddha images in Siam Cambodia and Java 53 The Mankuwar Buddha with inscribed date year 129 in the reign of Maharaja Kumaragupta hence 448 CE 54 Mankuwar District of Allahabad Lucknow Museum 42 55 Buddha standing inscribed Gift of Abhayamira in 154 GE 474 CE in the reign of Kumaragupta II Sarnath Museum 56 5th century Sarnath statue Indian Museum Buddha head Sarnath 5th century Buddha 450 500 Relief of Jain tirthankara Parshvanatha on the Kahaum pillar erected by Skandagupta in 461 CEOther centres Edit Nalanda Sultanganj Buddha in copper 500 700 CE 2 3 metres tall Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery Gupta sculptural qualities tend to deteriorate with time as in Nalanda in Bihar in the 6th century BCE figures become heavier and tend to be made in metal This evolution suggests a third school of Gupta art in the area Nalanda and Pataliputra besides the two main centres of Mathura and Vanarasi The colossal Sultanganj Buddha in copper from the area of Pataliputra is a uniquely large survival from this school but typical in style 42 In the same monastery two similar but much smaller and slightly later figures in stone were found one now on display in the British Museum 57 Udayagiri Caves VidishaThe first dated sculptures in a fully fledged early Gupta style come from the rock cut Udayagiri Caves and the surrounding area near Vidisha in Madhya Pradesh 58 Though the caves all but one Hindu are of negligible importance architecturally around the cave entrances are a number of rock relief panels some with large deities They are in a relatively crude and heavy style but often with a powerful impact Harle describes the mukhalinga in Cave 4 as pulsating with psychic power The most famous is the 7 x 4 metre relief of Vishnu in the form of the giant boar Varaha raising the earth from the primordial waters watched by rows of much smaller gods sages and celestial beings One cave also has an extremely rare inscription relating a site to the Gupta court recording the donation of a minister of Candragupta II 59 The famous Iron pillar of Delhi is thought likely to have been originally set up outside the caves Udayagiri Caves mukhalinga Cave 4 described as pulsating with psychic power 60 Head of Vishnu from Vidisha near Udayagiri Central India 4th century Vishnu in the form of Varaha Udayagiri caves circa 400 CE 61 In front probable relief of Chandragupta II 380 415 CE kneeling paying homage to Varaha 62 Eran Vishnu sleeping protected by Shesha Dashavatara Temple Deogarh Eran in Madhya Pradesh has a pillar or large single column dated 484 5 by an inscription of Buddhagupta the only standing Gupta example with two Garuda figures at the top illustrated below It had two large Varaha figures outside the ruined Gupta temple The style of the sculpture is somewhat provincial Still at the site is a huge and impressive boar on four legs with no human characteristics its body covered with rows of small figures representing the sages who clung to the hairs of Varaha to save themselves from the waters Now moved to the university museum at Sagar is a figure with the same body and pose as that at Udayagiri one of the greatest of all Indian sculptures nothing can match the figure s air of insolent triumph Both are dated to the late fifth century 63 OthersThe surviving sanctuary of the early 6th century Dashavatara Temple Deogarh has a typically fine doorway and large relief panels on the other three walls These are now external but would originally gave given on to the covered ambulatory Though majestic these show the sturdiness of early Gupta sculpture is yielding to a softer more delicate and ultimately weaker style 64 The row of men beneath the sleeping Vishnu have stylized poses probably imitated from the theatre 65 There are also other minor centres of Gupta sculpture particularly in the areas of Dasapura and Mandasor where a huge eight faced mukhalinga probably early 6th century found in the river has been reinstalled in the Pashupatinath Temple Mandsaur 66 The Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara continued a late phase through at least most of the Gupta period having also been a formative influence 58 Elephanta Caves triple bust trimurti of Shiva 18 feet 5 5 m tall c 550 Very important rock cut sites outside the Gupta Empire proper to the south are the Ajanta Caves and Elephanta Caves both mostly created in the Gupta period and the Ellora Caves which were probably begun around the end of it As it was mainly restricted to the Gangetic plain the vast Gupta territories included relatively few rock cut sites with much sculpture The later Ajanta style of sculpture is somewhat heavy but sometimes awe inspiring in the large seated shrine Buddhas but other smaller figures are often very fine as is the ornamental carving on columns and door frames 67 When combined with the painted walls the effect can be considered over decorated and lacking motifs on a larger scale to serve as focal points The main internal carving was probably completed by 478 though votive figures to the sides of many cave entrances may be later The Ajanta style is only seen at a few other sites nearby After work ended there much of the skilled workforce or their descendants probably ended up working at Elephanta and then Ellora 68 Unlike the series of caves side by side at Ajanta the main interest at Elephanta is the largest cave a huge Shiva temple and above all the colossal triple bust trimurti of Shiva 18 feet 5 5 m tall which because it is so amazingly skilfully placed in relation to the various external entrances receives exactly the amount of light necessary to make it look as if it is emerging from a black void manifestation from the unmanifest 69 Also from the Mumbai area the Parel Relief or Parel Shiva is an important late Gupta monolithic relief of Shiva in seven forms 70 The Eran Varaha about 5 metres long dedicated by Huna ruler Toramana circa 510 CE Vishnu Central India 5th century Shiva mukhalinga Bhumara Temple 5th or 6th century Madhya Pradesh Mother Goddess from entrance of a Hindu Temple Tanesara Mahadeva near Udaipur suggesting connections with the Art of Gandhara 71 5th 6th 72 73 or early 7th century CE 74 Cast of the Parel Relief in the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu SangrahalayaTerracotta sculpture EditThe earliest terracottas datable to the Gupta period appear under the Western Satraps at the Buddhist site of Devnimori in Gujarat circa 375 400 CE representing the southern extension of Gandharan influence to the subcontinent which persisted locally with the sites of Mirpur Khas Samalaji or Dhank a century before this influence would further extend to Ajanta and Sarnath 75 76 It has even been suggested that the art of the Western Satraps and Devnimori were at the origin of Gupta material culture but this remains a subject of debate 77 The Gupta period saw the production of many sculptures in terracotta of very fine quality and they are similar in style across the empire to an even greater extent than the stone sculpture 5 Some can still be seen in their original settings on the brick temple at Bhitargaon where the large relief panels have almost worn away but various heads and figures survive at higher levels 78 The very elegant pair of river goddesses excavated from a temple at Ahichchhatra are 1 47 metres high Terracotta Buddha head Devnimori Gujarat 375 400 These early terracottas show the influence of the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara 13 and belong to the art of the Western Satraps 13 Buddha from the Kahu Jo Darro stupa at Mirpur Khas Sindh circa 410 CE This is a conflation of the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara and Gupta art 79 Terracotta Ganges and attendant 1 47 metres from Ahichchhatra 5th 6th century CE National Museum New Delhi 80 Terracotta of Krishna battling the horse demon Keshi Uttar Pradesh 5th centurySculpture in metal Edit The Brahma from Mirpur Khas detail The over life size copper Sultanganj Buddha 2 3 metres tall is the only remaining metal statue of any size from the Gupta period out of what was at the time probably approximately as numerous a type as stone or stucco statues 81 There are however many much smaller near identical figures up to about 50 cm tall several in American museums The metal Brahma from Mirpur Khas is older but about half the size of the Sultanganj figure The Jain Akota bronzes and some other finds are much smaller still probably figures for shrines in well off homes 82 The style of the Sultanganj figure made by lost wax casting is comparable to slightly earlier stone Buddha figures from Sarnath in the smoothly rounded attenuation of body and limbs and the very thin clinging body garment indicated in the lightest of ways The figure has a feeling of animation imparted by the unbalanced stance and the movement suggested by the sweeping silhouette of the enveloping robe 81 Coins and metalwork Edit Silver plate with a festival scene Survivals of decorated secular metalwork are very rare 83 but a silver plate in the Cleveland Museum of Art shows a crowded festival scene in rather worn relief 84 There is also a highly decorated object in bronzed iron that is thought to be a weight for an architect s plummet or measuring line now in the British Museum 85 The gold coinage of the Guptas with its many types and infinite varieties and its inscriptions in Sanskrit are regarded as the finest coins in a purely Indian style 86 The Gupta Empire produced large numbers of gold coins depicting the Gupta kings performing various rituals as well as silver coins clearly influenced by those of the earlier Western Satraps by Chandragupta II 87 Coinage Edit Gupta coinage only started with the reign of Samudragupta 335 350 375 CE or possibly at the end of the reign of his father Chandragupta I for whom only one coin type in his name is known Chandragupta I and his queen probably a commemorative issue minted by his son 88 25 26 89 The coinage of the Gupta Empire was initially derived from the coinage of the Kushan Empire adopting its weight standard techniques and designs following the conquests of Samudragupta in the northwest 25 26 90 The Guptas even adopted from the Kushans the name of Dinara for their coinage which ultimately came from the Roman name Denarius aureus 91 92 93 The imagery on Gupta coins was initially derived from Kushan types but the features soon became more Indian in both style and subject matter compared to earlier dynasties where Greco Roman and Persian styles were mostly followed 94 95 96 The usual layout is an obverse with a portrait of the king that is normally full length whether standing seated or riding a horse and on the reverse a goddess most often seated on a throne Often the king is sacrificing The choice of images can have political meaning referring to conquests and local tastes the types often vary between parts of the empire 97 Types showing the king hunting and killing various animals lions the lion slayer type tigers and rhinoceros very likely refer to new conquests in the areas where those animals were still found They may also reflect influence from Sassanian silverware from Persia 98 The king standing and holding a bow to one side the archer type was used by at least eight kings it may have been intended to associate the king with Rama Profile heads of the king are used on some silver coins for Western provinces added to the empire 99 Some gold coins commemorate the Vedic Ashvamedha horse sacrifice ritual which the Gupta kings practised these have the sacrificial horse on the obverse and the queen on the reverse 100 Samudragupta is shown playing a string instrument wearing huge earrings but only a simple dhoti The only type produced under Chandragupta I shows him and his queen standing side by side The bird Garuda bearer of Vishnu is used as a symbol of the dynasty on many silver coins 101 Some of these were in the past misidentified as fire altars 102 The silver coinage of the Guptas was made in imitation of the coinage of the Western Satraps following their overthrow by Chandragupta II inserting the Gupta peacock symbol on the reverse but retaining traces of the Greek legend and the ruler s portrait on the obverse 103 104 Kumaragupta and Skandagupta continued with the old type of coins the Garuda and the Peacock types and also introduced some other new types 86 The copper coinage was mostly confined to the era of Chandragupta II and was more original in design Eight out of the nine types known to have been struck by him have a figure of Garuda and the name of the king on it The gradual deterioration in design and execution of the gold coins and the disappearance of silver money bear ample evidence to their curtailed territory 86 Chandragupta I and his queen Samudragupta left playing a musical instrument Goddess right c 335 380 Samudragupta coin with Ashvamedha horse standing in front of a yupa sacrificial post with legend The King of Kings who had performed the Ashvamedha sacrifice wins heaven after conquering the earth 105 106 The queen reverse of last is holding a chowrie for the fanning of the horse and a needle like pointed instrument with legend One powerful enough to perform the Ashvamedha sacrifice 105 106 Chandragupta II on horse Archer type of Chandragupta II Reverse of last goddess seated on a lotus Kumaragupta I lion hunting on an elephant Silver head of Skandagupta peacock on reverse 455 467 Style of the Western Satraps 107 108 109 Silver head of Budhagupta in the style of the Western Satraps Peacock on reverse 476 495 Architecture Edit Hindu temple of Bhitargaon late 5th century but considerably restored 110 For reasons that are not entirely clear for the most part the Gupta period represented a hiatus in Indian rock cut architecture with the first wave of construction finishing before the empire was assembled and the second wave beginning in the late 5th century just as it was ending This is the case for example at the Ajanta Caves with an early group made by 220 CE at the latest and a later one probably all after about 460 111 Instead the period has left almost the first surviving free standing structures in India in particular the beginnings of Hindu temple architecture As Milo Beach puts it Under the Guptas India was quick to join the rest of the medieval world in a passion for housing precious objects in stylized architectural frameworks 112 the precious objects being primarily the icons of gods The most famous remaining monuments in a broadly Gupta style the caves at Ajanta Elephanta and Ellora respectively Buddhist Hindu and mixed including Jain were in fact produced under other dynasties in Central India and in the case of Ellora after the Gupta period but primarily reflect the monumentality and balance of Guptan style Ajanta contains by far the most significant survivals of painting from this and the surrounding periods showing a mature form which had probably had a long development mainly in painting palaces 113 The Hindu Udayagiri Caves actually record connections with the dynasty and its ministers 114 and the Dashavatara Temple at Deogarh is a major temple one of the earliest to survive with important sculpture although it has lost its mandapa and covered ambulatory for parikrama 115 Examples of early North Indian Hindu temples that have survived after the Udayagiri Caves in Madhya Pradesh include those at Tigawa early 5th century 116 Pataini temple 5th century 117 Sanchi Temple 17 similar but respectively Hindu and Buddhist Deogarh Parvati Temple Nachna 465 118 Bhitargaon the largest Gupta brick temple to survive 119 and Lakshman Brick Temple Sirpur 600 625 CE Gop Temple in Gujarat c 550 or later is an oddity with no surviving close comparator 120 There are a number of different broad models which would continue to be the case for more than a century after the Gupta period but temples such as Tigawa and Sanchi Temple 17 which are small but massively built stone prostyle buildings with a sanctuary and a columned porch show the most common basic plan that is elaborated in later temples to the present day Both of these have flat roofs over the sanctuary which would become uncommon by about the 8th century The Mahabodhi Temple Bhitargaon Deogarh and Gop already all show high superstructures of different shapes 121 The Chejarla Kapoteswara temple demonstrates that free standing chaitya hall temples with barrel roofs continued to be built probably with many smaller examples in wood 122 Tetrastyle prostyle Gupta period Temple 17 at Sanchi possibly built for Buddhist use but typical of the evolving Hindu temple Mauryan Buddhist apsidal hall behind Dashavatara Temple Deogarh a 6th century Vishnu temple originally with a mandapa and covered ambulatory The current structure of the Mahabodhi Temple dates to the Gupta era 5th century Marking the location where the Buddha is said to have attained enlightenment Vishnu temple in Eran late 5th century Pataini temple is a Jain temple built during the Gupta period 5th centuryPillars Edit Pillars with inscriptions were erected recording the main achievements of Gupta rulers Whereas the Pillars of Ashoka were cylindrical smooth and finished with the famous Mauryan polish Gupta pillars had a rough surface often shaped into geometrical facets 123 The iron pillar of Delhi which features an inscription of Chandragupta II c 375 415 CE The Bhitari pillar of Skandagupta c 455 c 467 CE The Jain Kahaum pillar of Skandagupta 461 CE The Buddhagupta pillar at Eran 484 5Painting Edit Ajanta cave 17 frescoes above a lintel Painting was evidently a major art in Gupta times and the varied paintings of the Ajanta Caves which are much the best survivals almost the only ones show a very mature style and technique clearly the result of a well developed tradition 124 Indeed it is recorded that skill in amateur painting especially portraits was considered a desirable accomplishment among Gupta elites including royalty Ajanta was ruled by the powerful Vakataka dynasty beyond the territory of the Gupta Empire but it is thought to closely reflect the metropolitan Gupta style 125 The other survivals are from the Bagh Caves now mostly removed to the Gujari Mahal Archaeological Museum in Gwalior Fort Ellora and Cave III of the Badami cave temples 126 At Ajanta it is thought that established teams of painters used to decorating palaces and temples elsewhere were brought in when required to decorate a cave Mural paintings survive from both the earlier and later groups of the caves Several fragments of murals preserved from the earlier caves Caves 10 and 11 are effectively unique survivals of ancient painting in India from this period and show that by Satavahana times if not earlier the Indian painters had mastered an easy and fluent naturalistic style dealing with large groups of people in a manner comparable to the reliefs of the Sanci torana crossbars 127 Four of the later caves have large and relatively well preserved mural paintings which have come to represent Indian mural painting to the non specialist 127 and represent the great glories not only of Gupta but of all Indian art 128 They fall into two stylistic groups with the most famous in Caves 16 and 17 and what used to thought of as later paintings in Caves 1 and 2 However the widely accepted new chronology proposed by Spink places both groups in the 5th century probably before 478 129 The paintings are in dry fresco painted on top of a dry plaster surface rather than into wet plaster 130 All the paintings appear to be the work of painters supported by discriminating connoisseurship and sophisticated patrons from an urban atmosphere Unlike much Indian mural painting compositions are not laid out in horizontal bands like a frieze but show large scenes spreading in all directions from a single figure or group at the centre 131 The ceilings are also painted with sophisticated and elaborate decorative motifs many derived from sculpture 132 The paintings in cave 1 which according to Spink was commissioned by Harisena himself concentrate on those Jataka tales which show previous lives of the Buddha as a king rather than as a deer or elephant or other animal 133 The Ajanta paintings have seriously deteriorated since they were rediscovered in 1819 and are now mostly hard to appreciate at the site A number of early attempts to copy them met with misfortune Only mural paintings survive but it is clear from literary sources that portable paintings including portraits were common probably including illustrated manuscripts 130 Ajanta paintings One of four frescos for the Mahajanaka Jataka tale The king announces he abdicates to become an ascetic 134 Sibi Jataka king undergoes the traditional rituals for renouncers He receives a ceremonial bath 135 136 The Bodhisattva of compassion Padmapani with lotus 135 137 Foreigners in Cave 17 AjantaChronology EditThe chronology of Gupta art is quite critical to the art history of the region Fortunately several statues are precisely dated based on inscriptions referring to the various rulers of the Gupta Empire and giving their regnal dates in the Gupta era Dated statuary under the Guptas 319 543 CE 380 CELakulisa Pillar in the year 61 following the era of the Guptas 380 CE 138 384 CEOne of the earliest dated Gupta statues a Bodhisattva derived from the Kushan style of Mathura art inscribed year 64 of the Gupta era 384 CE Bodh Gaya 15 Reign of Chandragupta II c 400 CEVishnu in his Varaha or man boar avatar rescuing goddess earth Udayagiri Caves Reign of Chandragupta II 139 434 CEStanding Buddha inscribed Gupta Era year 115 434 CE Mathura Reign of Kumaragupta I 140 448 CEThe Mankuwar Buddha with inscribed date year 129 in the reign of Maharaja Kumaragupta hence 448 CE 141 Mankuwar District of Allahabad Lucknow Museum 42 142 461 CERelief of Jain tirthankara Parshvanatha on the Kahaum pillar erected by Skandagupta in 461 CE 474 CE Gift of Abhayamira in 154 GE 474 CE in the reign of Kumaragupta II 143 476 CE Gift of Abhayamitra in 157 in the reign of Buddhagupta 476 CE 144 145 510 CEEran pillar of Bhanugupta Final period Sondani 525 CE Edit The sculptures at Sondani and surrounding areas of Mandsaur are a good marker for the final period of Gupta Art as they were commissioned by Yasodharman ruled 515 545 CE around 525 CE in celebration of his victory against the Alchon Hun king Mihirakula 146 147 This corresponds to the last phase of Gupta cultural and political unity in the subcontinent and after that point and for the next centuries Indian politics became extremely fragmented with the territory being divided between smaller dynasties 148 The art of Sondani is considered as transitional between Gupta art and the art of Medieval India it represents an aesthetic which hovered between the classical decorum of Gupta art on the one hand and on the other the medieval canons which subordinated the figure to the larger religious purpose 149 Sondani two Dvarapalas circa 525 CE Sondani pillar capital circa 525 CE Vidyadhara Sondani circa 525 CE National Museum New Delhi Prakasheshvara in Mandsaur FortInfluences in Southeast Asia Edit Central Thailand Dvaravati Mon Dvaravati style 7th 9th Century Indian art particularly Gupta and Post Gupta art from Eastern India was influential in the development of Buddhist and Hindu art in Southeast Asia from the 6th century CE 150 The Mon people of the kingdom of Dvaravati in modern Thailand were among the first to adopt Buddhism and developed a particular style of Buddhist art Mon Davarati statues of the Buddha have facial features and hair styles reminiscent of the art of Mathura 150 In pre Angkorian Cambodia from the 7th century CE Harihara statues fusing the characteristics of Shiva and Vishnu are known 150 A seated Buddha in Dvaravati style 6th century CE Harihara statue Cambodia 7th century CESee also EditIndian art Architecture of India Indo Greek art Art of Mathura Mauryan art Kushan art Hoysala architecture Vijayanagara architecture Greco Buddhist art Chola art and architecture Pallava art and architecture Badami Chalukya architectureNotes Edit a b c d Mookerji 142 Rowland s chapter 15 is called The Golden Age The Gupta Period Harle 88 Williams Joanna 1972 The Sculpture of Mandasor PDF Archives of Asian Art 26 64 ISSN 0066 6637 JSTOR 20111042 Harle 118 a b c d e Harle 89 Rowland 215 Harle 199 Harle 89 Rowland 216 Harle 88 355 361 Rowland 252 253 Stokstad Marilyn Cothren Michael W 2013 Art History 5th Edition Chapter 10 Art Of South And Southeast Asia Before 1200 Pearson pp 306 308 ISBN 978 0205873487 Schastok Sara L 1985 The Samalaji Sculptures and 6th Century Art in Western India BRILL pp 23 31 ISBN 978 9004069411 a b c The Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies Volume 4 1981 Number I An Exceptional Group of Painted Buddha Figures at Ajanṭa p 97 and Note 2 a b Gupta art in north India of the fifth century did receive the heritage of the Mathura as well as Ksatrapa Satavahana arts in Pal Pratapaditya 1972 Aspects of Indian Art Papers Presented in a Symposium at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art October 1970 Brill Archive p 47 ISBN 9789004036253 a b c d Rhi Ju Hyung 1994 From Bodhisattva to Buddha The Beginning of Iconic Representation in Buddhist Art Artibus Asiae 54 3 4 223 doi 10 2307 3250056 ISSN 0004 3648 JSTOR 3250056 Duiker William J Spielvogel Jackson J 2015 World History Cengage Learning p 279 ISBN 9781305537781 Mookerji Radhakumud 1997 The Gupta Empire Motilal Banarsidass Publ p 143 ISBN 9788120804401 Gokhale Balkrishna Govind 1995 Ancient India History and Culture Popular Prakashan pp 171 173 ISBN 9788171546947 Lowenstein Tom 2012 The Civilization of Ancient India and Southeast Asia The Rosen Publishing Group Inc p 53 ISBN 9781448885077 Harle 88 a b Agrawal Ashvini 1989 Rise and Fall of the Imperial Guptas Motilal Banarsidass Publ pp 98 100 ISBN 978 81 208 0592 7 Pal 69 Collections Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds vmis in American Institute of Indian Studies Altekar A s 1957 Coinage Of The Gupta Empire p 39 a b c Mookerji Radhakumud 1997 The Gupta Empire Motilal Banarsidass Publ p 30 ISBN 9788120804401 a b c Higham Charles 2014 Encyclopedia of Ancient Asian Civilizations Infobase Publishing p 82 ISBN 9781438109961 It was his conquests which brought to him the gold utilized in his coinage and also the knowledge of its technique acquired from his acquaintance with Kushan eastern Punjab coins His earliest coins began as imitations of these Kushan coins and of their foreign features which were gradually replaced by Indian features in his later coins in Mookerji Radhakumud 1997 The Gupta Empire Motilal Banarsidass Publ p 30 ISBN 9788120804401 Pal 78 Art Los Angeles County Museum of Pal Pratapaditya 1986 Indian Sculpture Circa 500 B C A D 700 University of California Press p 73 ISBN 9780520059917 Ishikawa Ken 2019 More Gandhara than Mathura substantial and persistent Gandharan influences provincialized in the Buddhist material culture of Gujarat and beyond c AD 400 550 in The Global Connections of Gandharan Art p 166 However all the Gupta Buddha images show one or more formative Gupta characteristics the ornamentation of the halo with floral and gem motifs the garments with diaphanous drapery hair curls meditative eyes elongated earlobes the pronounced lower lip and or three lines across his neck Miyaji 1980 16 Asher Frederick M 2003 Sarnath Oxford Art Online Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gao 9781884446054 article t076054 ISBN 978 1 884446 05 4 retrieved 2020 12 25 Mookerji 1 143 Harle 89 Rowland 216 Mookerji 143 Harle 87 88 Rowland 234 Harle 87 88 88 quoted Rowland 235 Rowland 232 Rowland 233 Rowland 230 233 232 and 233 quoted Rowland 229 232 Mookerji 143 a b c d e Mookerji 143 Mookerji 142 143 Kushana Gupta transitional period per Mathura Museum label visible on the photograph Collections Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds vmis in American Institute of Indian Studies For English summary see page 80 Schmid Charlotte 1997 Les Vaikuṇṭha gupta de Mathura Viṣṇu ou Kṛṣṇa Arts Asiatiques 52 60 88 doi 10 3406 arasi 1997 1401 Rowland 234 235 Harle 109 110 Harle James C January 1994 The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent Yale University Press p 109 ISBN 978 0 300 06217 5 Harle 107 110 107 quoted Harle 110 Rowland 232 237 Harle 89 90 Harle 109 110 Rowland 235 Fleet John Faithfull 1960 Inscriptions Of The Early Gupta Kings And Their Successors p 47 Mankuwar Buddha Image Inscription of the Time of Kumaragupta I siddham siddham uk Collections Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds vmis in American Institute of Indian Studies British Museum page permanent dead link a b Harle 92 Harle 92 97 93 quoted Harle 93 Curta Florin Holt Andrew 28 November 2016 Great Events in Religion An Encyclopedia of Pivotal Events in Religious History 3 volumes ABC CLIO p 271 ISBN 978 1 61069 566 4 BECKER CATHERINE 2010 Not Your Average Boar The Colossal Varaha at Eraṇ an Iconographic Innovation Artibus Asiae 70 1 127 ISSN 0004 3648 JSTOR 20801634 Harle 97 100 99 100 quoted Harle 113 Harle 113 114 Mookerji 144 Harle 114 Harle 118 120 120 quoted 122 124 Harle 122 Harle 124 Harle 124 Mother Goddess Cleveland Museum of Art 31 October 2018 India Rajasthan Tanesara Mahadeva Gupta Period Matrika from Tanesara a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Mother Goddess Cleveland Museum of Art 31 October 2018 Harle James C January 1994 The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent Yale University Press p 115 ISBN 978 0 300 06217 5 Ishikawa Ken 2020 More Gandhara than Mathura substantial and persistent Gandharan influences provincialized in the Buddhist material culture of Gujarat and beyond c AD 400 550 in The Global Connections of Gandharan Art PDF Archaeopress Archaeology pp 156 157 Furthermore I will trace the waves of Gandharan influences observed at Devnimori which within or after a century or so eventually reached Sarnath and Ajaṇṭa and locally persisted at Samalaji in north Gujarat Dhank in Saurashtra in India and Mirpur Khas in Sindh in Pakistan Ishikawa Ken January 2020 The Global Connections of Gandharan Art p 168 Overall the early Gupta Jain tirthaṅkara images from Vidisa are regarded as anticipating together with the Bodh Gaya Buddha Bodhisattva image and fully fledged Gupta style buddha images at Devnimori soon after the fully fledged mature Gupta Buddha images at Mathura and Sarnath that developed during the following fifth century AD Ishikawa Ken 2019 More Gandhara than Mathura substantial and persistent Gandharan influences provincialized in the Buddhist material culture of Gujarat and beyond c AD 400 550 in The Global Connections of Gandharan Art pp 156ff Even so the idea that Devnimori or the Western Kṣatrapas were the progenitor of Gupta material culture has long been a subject of debate Williams 1982 58 9 Although the role of western India in the formation of pan Indian Gupta material culture is a notoriously problematic issue we might further contextualize Devnimori by reconsidering the extent of the late Gandharan influence as well as pre existing material culture of Gujarat Harle 115 Indian Art Prince of Wales Museum of Western India 1964 pp 2 4 The terracotta figures of Mirpur Khas represent the Gupta idiom as it flourished in Sindh In the terracottas of Mirpur Khas of which the Museum has a most representative collection one may see the synthesis of Gandhara and Gupta traditions Here the old sacrosanct forms of Gandhara are moulded in the Gupta character of nobility restraint and spirituality and the result is very pleasing The figures of the Buddha from Mirpur Khas show transformation from the Gandhara to Gupta idiom which the figures of the donor and Kubera show well developed Gupta types Harle James C January 1994 The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent Yale University Press p 117 ISBN 978 0 300 06217 5 a b Rowland 237 Rowland 237 239 Rowland 253 Plate with a Scene of Revelry Cleveland Museum of Art Rowland 253 254 a b c The Coins Of India by Brown C J p 13 20 Allan J amp Stern S M 2008 coin Encyclopaedia Britannica Altekar A s 1957 Coinage Of The Gupta Empire p 39 Brown C J 1987 The Coins of India Asian Educational Services p 41 ISBN 9788120603455 Sen Sudipta 2019 Ganges The Many Pasts of an Indian River Yale University Press p 205 ISBN 9780300119169 Known by the term Dinars in early Gupta inscriptions their gold coinage was based on the weight standard of the Kushans i e 8 gms 120 grains It was replaced in the time of Skandagupta by a standard of 80 ratis or 144 grains Vanaja R 1983 Indian Coinage National Museum Mookerji Radhakumud 1997 The Gupta Empire Motilal Banarsidass Publ p 31 ISBN 9788120804401 Gupta inscriptions using the term Dinara for money No 5 9 62 64 in Fleet John Faithfull 1960 Inscriptions Of The Early Gupta Kings And Their Successors It was his conquests which brought to him the gold utilized in his coinage and also the knowledge of its technique acquired from his acquaintance with Kushan eastern Punjab coins His earliest coins began as imitations of these Kushan coins and of their foreign features which were gradually replaced by Indian features in his later coins in Mookerji Radhakumud 1997 The Gupta Empire Motilal Banarsidass Publ p 30 ISBN 9788120804401 Pal 78 Art Los Angeles County Museum of Pal Pratapaditya 1986 Indian Sculpture Circa 500 B C A D 700 University of California Press p 73 ISBN 9780520059917 Mookerji 139 141 Bajpai 121 Pal 78 80 Sircar 215 217 Pal 74 75 The alternative explanation is that these animals were still more widespread than is usually thought Mookerji 139 141 Pal 73 74 Glucklich 111 113 Mookerji 140 Pal 79 80 suggests instead the female figure may represent Vijaya the goddess of victory Mookerji 139 141 Pal 73 75 Bajpai 121 124 Prasanna Rao Bandela 2003 Coin splendour a journey into the past Abhinav Publications pp 112 ISBN 978 81 7017 427 1 Retrieved 21 November 2011 Evidence of the conquest of Saurastra during the reign of Chandragupta II is to be seen in his rare silver coins which are more directly imitated from those of the Western Satraps they retain some traces of the old inscriptions in Greek characters while on the reverse they substitute the Gupta type a peacock for the chaitya with crescent and star in Rapson A catalogue of Indian coins in the British Museum The Andhras etc p cli a b Houben Jan E M Kooij Karel Rijk van 1999 Violence Denied Violence Non Violence and the Rationalization of Violence in South Asian Cultural History BRILL p 128 ISBN 978 90 04 11344 2 a b Ganguly Dilip Kumar 1984 History and Historians in Ancient India Abhinav Publications p 152 ISBN 978 0 391 03250 7 Evidence of the conquest of Saurastra during the reign of Chandragupta II is to be seen in his rare silver coins which are more directly imitated from those of the Western Satraps they retain some traces of the old inscriptions in Greek characters while on the reverse they substitute the Gupta type for the chaitya with crescent and star in Rapson A catalogue of Indian coins in the British Museum The Andhras etc p cli Curta Florin Holt Andrew 2016 Great Events in Religion An Encyclopedia of Pivotal Events in Religious History 3 volumes ABC CLIO p 271 ISBN 978 1 61069 566 4 Curta Florin Holt Andrew 28 November 2016 Great Events in Religion An Encyclopedia of Pivotal Events in Religious History 3 volumes ABC CLIO p 271 ISBN 978 1 61069 566 4 Harle James C January 1994 The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent Yale University Press p 116 ISBN 978 0 300 06217 5 Ajanta chronology is still under discussion but this is the view of Spink accepted by many Beach Milo Steps to Water The Ancient Stepwells of India Photographs by Morna Livingston p 25 2002 Princeton Architectural Press ISBN 1568983247 9781568983240 google books J C Harle 1994 pp 118 22 123 26 129 35 sfn error no target CITEREFJ C Harle1994 help J C Harle 1994 pp 92 97 sfn error no target CITEREFJ C Harle1994 help Harle 113 114 see also site entries in Michell 1990 Michell 1990 192 Cunningham Alexander 1879 Report of a Tour in the Central Provinces in 1873 74 and 1874 75 Archaeological Survey of India Vol 9 Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing p 31 Michael Meister 1987 Hindu Temple in The Encyclopedia of Religion editor Mircea Eliade Volume 14 Macmillan ISBN 0 02 909850 5 page 370 Michell 1990 157 Michell 1988 96 Harle 111 113 136 138 Michell 1988 90 96 98 see also site entries in Michell 1990 Harle 111 113 Michell 1988 94 98 Harle 175 Gupta artistes built it with the rough surface and with the different shapes of square octagonal and hexagonal They decorated the pillars with the meandering creepers flowers of blue and red lotuses pitchers and the pattern of leogryph Sudhi Padma 1993 Gupta Art a Study from Aesthetic and Canonical Norms Galaxy Publications p 120 ISBN 978 81 7200 007 3 Honour Hugh Fleming John 2005 A World History of Art Laurence King Publishing p 244 ISBN 978 1 85669 451 3 Harle James C January 1994 The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent Yale University Press p 118 ISBN 978 0 300 06217 5 Harle 355 361 a b Harle 355 Harle 356 Harle 355 361 Spink a b Harle 361 Harle 359 Harle 355 361 Spink 2008 Mahajanaka Jataka Ajanta Cave 1 University of Minnesota a b Benoy Behl 2004 Ajanta the fountainhead Frontline Volume 21 Issue 20 Gupte amp Mahajan 1962 pp 32 33 Plate XI Gupte amp Mahajan 1962 pp 8 9 Plate IV Collections Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds vmis in American Institute of Indian Studies Curta Florin Holt Andrew 28 November 2016 Great Events in Religion An Encyclopedia of Pivotal Events in Religious History 3 volumes ABC CLIO p 271 ISBN 978 1 61069 566 4 Collections Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds vmis in American Institute of Indian Studies Fleet John Faithfull 1960 Inscriptions Of The Early Gupta Kings And Their Successors p 47 Mankuwar Buddha Image Inscription of the Time of Kumaragupta I siddham siddham uk Collections Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds vmis in American Institute of Indian Studies Collections Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds vmis in American Institute of Indian Studies Majumdar B 1937 Guide to Sarnath p 89 Coin Cabinet of the Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna Archived from the original on 2019 11 01 Retrieved 2021 12 18 Williams Joanna 1972 The Sculpture of Mandasor PDF Archives of Asian Art 26 63 ISSN 0066 6637 JSTOR 20111042 The reign of Yasodharman thus forms an important dividing point between the period of the imperial Guptas whom he emulated and the following centuries when India fell into a kaleidoscopic confusion of shifting smaller dynasties in Williams Joanna 1972 The Sculpture of Mandasor PDF Archives of Asian Art 26 52 ISSN 0066 6637 JSTOR 20111042 Williams Joanna 1972 The Sculpture of Mandasor PDF Archives of Asian Art 26 64 ISSN 0066 6637 JSTOR 20111042 a b c Stokstad Marilyn Cothren Michael W 2013 Art History 5th Edition Chapter 10 Art Of South And Southeast Asia Before 1200 Pearson pp 323 325 ISBN 978 0205873487 References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Art of the Gupta period Bajpai K D Indian Numismatic Studies 2004 Abhinav Publications ISBN 8170170354 9788170170358 google books Glucklich Ariel 2007 The Strides of Vishnu Hindu Culture in Historical Perspective Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195314052 Gupte Ramesh Shankar Mahajan B D 1962 Ajanta Ellora and Aurangabad Caves D B Taraporevala Harle J C The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent 2nd edn 1994 Yale University Press Pelican History of Art ISBN 0300062176 Mookerji Radhakumud 1997 The Gupta Empire Motilal Banarsidass Publ ISBN 9788120804401 google books Michell George 1988 The Hindu Temple An Introduction to its Meaning and Forms 2nd edn University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 53230 1 Michell George 1990 The Penguin Guide to the Monuments of India Volume 1 Buddhist Jain Hindu 1990 Penguin Books ISBN 0140081445 Rowland Benjamin The Art and Architecture of India Buddhist Hindu Jain 1967 3rd edn Pelican History of Art Penguin ISBN 0140561021 Pal Pratapaditya Indian Sculpture Circa 500 B C A D 700 Volume 1 of Indian Sculpture A Catalogue of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art Collection 1986 Los Angeles County Museum of Art University of California Press ISBN 0520059913 9780520059917 google books Sircar D C Studies in Indian Coins 2008 Motilal Banarsidass Publisher 2008 ISBN 8120829735 9788120829732 google books Spink Walter M 2008 Ajanta Lecture Korea May 2008 revised September 2008 archived from the original on 2021 06 18 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gupta art amp oldid 1152224355, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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