Guest guest Posted June 6, 2005 Report Share Posted June 6, 2005 The love images of Khajuraho are the symbols of the ritual of the magical cults of the Tantra, of the Kaulas and the Kapalikas, who believed in attainment of the divine through the ecstasy of sexual union.(The Khajuraho Dance Festival is held from in March-Feb) Khajuraho Of the love of man and woman, there are few representations anywhere, so tender and full of charm as those on the temples of Khajuraho. In the maze of each wall, one can search for immortality in certain images, which are 'as though breathing', according to the highest ideals of imaginative skill of our ancient craftsmen. Mohini looks into the mirror with her head inclined in the Narcissus mood of a young girl awakening to her own beauty. A hero, with the lion shoulders and the profile of a God, is bending his head graciously over the beloved, who looks up to the lover, until their four eyes meet. The body of another lover is fused in coition with that of the heroine, in the most sensitive adoration, where each is both. Still another male is protecting his frightened female companion against a monkey. A dancer with a cylindrical body is tying the bells on her feet, to get ready for the sway of her limbs in dance. The musicians play on the flute, the drums and the cymbals. There are orgies of love-making in the palaces of kings, with the shy maids-in-waiting, standing or helping, with faces slightly averted from the privacy of the union. The play-function of sex, which Vatsyayana had insisted upon, apart from sex for the procreation of new life, is shown with an abandon of ecstasy everywhere. If one brings to one's view of the toilet of the brides, the conjugal embraces, and the love potencies, the warmth of passion of the private act of blissful connection, then the sculptures will only confirm one's own personal joy in the expression of the act of desire, in all our own longings, aspirations and fulfillments. But if people bring to Khajuraho, the cold stare of erotic curiosity from a prurient curiosity, without any heart, then the whole panorama on the walls, congested with the lush imagery of love-play will fall flat on their empirical egos. Ostensibly, the intention of the builders was not to afford to the vulgar, compensatory pleasures, such as they have never enjoyed in life, but to celebrate the happiness of loving. There are certainly a number of postures, which look odd to those who have never been possessed by passion. There are some conjugations which only adepts, with full control in their minds and bodies and hearts could perform. And there are a number of jokes, such as the inferior craftsmen in all the temples and cathedrals of the world perpetuated from their lowest consciousness. But the dominance of Gods and Goddesses Brahma and his consort, of Vishnu, and Laxmi, Shiva and Parvati provide the key symbolism of sacred love. Thus the heroes and heroines, approaching each other for consummation of marriage, are only the prototypes of perfect couples, achieving, through the physical act, the oneness in which lies salvation. The One Supreme God had, by union with his consort, created the whole universe. Every pair of human beings has the corresponding desire to fuse themselves into each other and had become One. There is some mystery about how, in the 10th and 11th century (from 950-1050 A.D), in a flat plateau of the Vindhya mountains, there came to be the eighty great temples, out of which only nine important ones have survived. We must remember that, in the early mediaeval period, this vitality adoration of the impulses, ideas and feelings, connected with the potent phallus of the god Shiva, had become the part of the indigenous Hindu dharma of the north. There had also been some synthesis of this with Greek paganism, in the classical renaissance of the Gupta Empire (about 300-550 A.D). The recognition had come that the Hindu dharma had originally been built on the frank recognition that the world came to be through the togetherness of the male and female. The Buddha had, indeed, rejected existence through the awareness of the pain of life. The early Jain followers of Mahavira had suggested mortification of flesh to attain liberation. But the ascetic attitudes of these two revolts against the Hindu faith, had been dissolved by Brahminical interpretation, in the books called the Puranas of the human situation. Said the Matsya Purana: ""The divine and the human forms are born of parents...... The divine form is endowed with enlightenment. The human form is not so well endowed"". Further, the Brahmins had shown how, in the ordinary family life (grihasta) salvation in the transcendental ego, that is to say , ascent to the Supreme God, is possible, by tasting the fruits of life: 'The Worshipper, who attains knowledge of Brahman, is attended by hundreds of celestial damsels. One hundred carry scented powders, saffron, turmeric in their hands. One hundred carry fruits and one hundred carry various ornaments and garlands. They adorn him with ornaments befitting Brahman the Supreme God himself. Thus adorned with Brahman ornaments and knowing Brahman, he goes to Brahman'. The holyness of physical connection implied in this interpretation had given sanctions to the poets of the Renaissance, opened their sensibilities to each feeling, emotion and mood. Being part of god, everything in man's heart was an expression of the nature of god. And in the making of His images was liberation. As against the Yoga of prayer and contemplation, to achieve fusion with reality, there was Bhoga, the tasting of the flavours of food, wine and body, to seek union. There were millions of forms, in various symbolic attitudes, illustrating poetical metaphors, with double meanings, even before the Christian era. Thus each human act of grace, gentleness, a smile, a kiss, an embrace, mother giving suck to a child, had become a terra-cotta image, enshrined in each home. The 'otherness' of the higher self could be achieved by concentration on the 'I-ness' of the image. The proliferation of the various ways of worship, according tot he approach of each cult of the Hindus, to transcend the human situation and ennoble it, led to the creation of myriads of unique images. The love images of Khajuraho are the symbols of the ritual of the magical cults of the Tantra, of the Kaulas and the Kapalikas, who believed in attainment of the divine through the ecstasy of sexual union. Obviously, the patronage of the Chandela Dynasty led to the elaboration of the phallus and its symbols, as well as of the loving figures in relief, beyond the sensuous imagery of the Gupta brick temple of Bhitargaon, to a romantic-classical art of Khajuraho. The dense woods of the Vindhyas, with lakes interspersed here and there amid ant low hills, afforded just the kind of idyllic landscapes, for the carnivals of dance, music and love play. The plentiful harvest, the abundance of fruit and flower, the mineral wealth including precious stones, provided the basis of luxury to the kingdom. The patronage of the kings gave incentive to the practice of various skills. And it is likely that, apart from the local craftsmen, members of itinerant guilds from Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan were called here to build the temples even before the Chandelas. Certainly, a panegyric to the King Dhanga, on a stone of the Vishwanatha Temple, gives evidence of generous endowment by him and other Chandelas, for various shrines. And legend has it that hundreds of beautiful Devadasis, or dancing girls, were fetched from far distances for the ritual of phallic worship. The Sursundaris on the walls of the Temples were obviously modeled on these lovely women. The panel showing Vishwakarma, the god of the crafts on .the Lakshmana Temple, clearly points to the extension of the inheritance by the master builders, of the Gupta tradition, though the fusion of architecture and sculpture. 'The House and Body of God', says Dr. Kramarisch, 'is envisaged articulate in all its parts...... The form of the images convey at the unique constellation under which the images were beheld inwardly by the sculptor and were alive in the consciousness of the people. The order in which these are placed belongs to total edifice of thought and aspiration, towards the ultimate aim of life, towards which also, symbolically, the curves of the Sikhara rise'. The innermost shrine is in the form of a square peasant hut. But it is formalised into a miniature cosmos, radiating in all direction through the images on its walls, and upwards to heaven, with the tapering Mount Menru, which probes the sky. The technique of carving is thus neither 'primitivist' nor 'naturalist' in the western sense, which copies the outer aspects of human beings. It is inspired by intense visualisation, from within, in the picture language called dhyanamatra, through forms made symbolic, to the extent to which the limbs seemed to be informed with energies, movements and powers, as in the ideal life. There is no 'objective reality' here. Only expression of inner feeling, in curvaceous line, volumes and coherences, which approximate to the rhythmic possibilities of the desire image. Some of the most perfect realisations of integral form in the whole of world art are in situ on the walls of the temples of Khajuraho. Original Source : Directorate of Tourism, Government of Madhya Pradesh Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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