Guest guest Posted August 21, 2001 Report Share Posted August 21, 2001 Cultural Context Ganesha loves to dance. The emphasis on dance in the Hindu tradition is reflected in the inclusion of sound and music in worship. Because this sculpture would have been carried in a procession, we must imagine the presence of sounds, movements, flowers, and incense. The eleventh-century poet Rajasekhana described Ganesha's playful, lively dance: May the dancing Ganesha be your aid, copied by the guardian elephants of the horizon, who spring up lightly from the earth that trembles at the stamping of his feet, the while with upraised trunk he drinks and then sprays back like drops of water the great circle of stars.1 Ganesha is one of the most popular Hindu deities. Every Hindu temple has a shrine dedicated to him, and he is also worshipped in almost every home. Ganesha is so widely loved because he is the god of lucky beginnings and good fortune. He is the deity who can remove any obstacle. For this reason, Ganesha's name is called upon at the beginning of every worship and every undertaking, whether it be a journey, the building of a house, or the writing of a book. Ganesha is one of the sons of the major Hindu god Siva and his wife Parvati. He is always represented as a short, potbellied male with four arms and the head of an elephant. Like many Indian deities, he has multiple arms in order to hold his identifying attributes. Ganesha generally carries a battle-ax, a weapon that destroys obstacles and ignorance. He also holds a bunch of mangoes, a bowl of sweets, and his broken tusk. Sometimes, he stands atop his mount, which is a rat (the rat can chew through any obstacle). There are many stories describing how Ganesha got his head. In one version, he lost his human head while still an infant, and his father replaced it with the head of the first creature he could find, which happened to be an elephant. Ganesha is a unique representation of an elephant in that he combines tremendous power with childlike playfulness. Ganesha is also the god of wisdom and prudence and is thought to be an expert scribe, learned in the scriptures. It is traditionally told that Ganesha served as the stenographer for the great Indian epic, the Mahabharata. Historical Background The most widespread religion in India today is Hinduism, a European name given to a multitude of different religious groups, some small and some large. Hinduism evolved over many centuries, blending local Indian traditions with practices brought to the land by outside settlers. An important act of Hindu worship is to visit a temple sacred to a deity or group of deities. While there, the worshiper makes an offering to the deity of flowers, incense, fruit, or other gifts. He or she stands before an image that embodies the deity to experience darshan, that is, to see the divine image and be seen by it. The majority of Hindu sculpture was made to be used in darshan, either in religious processions or as part of the decorative scheme on a temple exterior. The bronzes of southern India (like the Dancing Ganesha) were made to be carried in processions, where many people could glimpse the deity at one time. There is an inscription on the base of this piece stating that the sculpture was donated by a worshiper named Ramappa in honor of the Lord" (either Ganesha himself or the deity of the temple to which the sculpture was dedicated). Giving a religious gift such as this to a temple or for private use was considered to be an act of utmost piety. Medium The Dancing Ganesha was made in the southwestern state of Karnataka in the sixteenth century. The artist carried on the great tradition of bronze sculpture that had emerged in southern India in the nearby state of Tamil Nadu between the ninth and thirteenth centuries A.D. The piece is made of bronze, a copper alloy, and was created through the lost wax process. In this process, a wax original is covered with clay. When the object is baked, the wax melts away and the clay becomes hard, forming a mold. This mold is then filled with molten bronze. After the bronze cools, the mold is removed, revealing the image. The surface is then smoothed and finished to enhance details. The artist who made the Dancing Ganesha has used the material masterfully to create an image of the rotund and jolly deity that is graceful, well-balanced, and intricate in its surface decoration. Theme Symbol of Good Fortune As the god of wisdom and good fortune, Ganesha displays certain attributes. He holds his broken tusk (seen here in his lower right hand), used as a weapon or writing tool, and his bowl of favorite sweets, symbolizing abundance, into which he often dips his trunk. He also holds an ax in his upper right hand and a bunch of mangoes, representing fertility, in his upper left. Ganesha's dance evokes a sense of playfulness and childlike joy. Here, Ganesha dances a happy jig on top of a lotus flower, a symbol of the universe and of the pure heart of the devotee. Timeline 2500-1500 B.C.Indus valley civilization and earliest known use of bronze. 1500-500 B.C.Introduction of religious foundations of Hinduism to India through successive invasions from the north. 1000 B.C.Development of stories that became the basis for the epic Mahabharata. 563 B.C.Buddha Sakyamuni born in the Himalayan foothills of present-day Nepal. 483 B.C.Buddha passes into nirvana. 327 B.C.Macedonian king Alexander the Great reaches India. 273-232 B.C.First unification of India under Ashoka, whose empire stretched from Afghanistan in the north to Karnataka in the south; after his death, the empire split again. 4th-6th centuriesGupta period; patronage of monumental Hindu temples flourishes; many are built and decorated with terra-cotta relief panels and freestanding deities. 4th centuryStories describing Ganesha begin to develop. 5th centuryEarliest sculptural images of Ganesha appear in central India. 8th-13th centuriesPeriod of great Hindu temple building in central and southern India; Chola period (850-1279) marks era of intense production of bronze sculpture in southern India. 14th-16th centuriesBronze tradition continues in southern India; the Dancing Ganesha made in Karnataka. References Blurton, T. Richard. Hindu Art. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1992. Brown, Robert L., ed. Ganesh, Studies of an Asian God. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1991. Courtright, Paul B. Genesa: Lord of Obstacles, Lord of Beginnings. New York: Oxford University Press, 1985 Eck, Diana L. Darsan: Seeing the Divine Image in India. Chambersburg, Pennsylvania:Anima Books, 1981. Ions, Veronica, Indian Mythology. London: Paul Hamlyn Limited, 1967. Pal, Pratapaditya. Elephants and Ivories in South Asia. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Musuem of Art, 1981. Pal, Pratapaditya. Indian Art, Vol. II, 700 - 1800. Berkeley: Los Angeles County Musuem of Art in association with University of California Press, 1988. For Children Color Me Genesha (coloring book). San Francisco: Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, Education Department, 1986. http://www.getty.edu/artsednet/resources/Maps/ganesha.htmlDo You ? 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