A bold feat of imagination and with no apparent apprehension as to
whether the believing mind would approve seeing in a mother from the
courtyard of a modern house the ever first mother
Parvati, Shiva’s
consort, the artist of this contemporary masterpiece has created with
firm strokes of brush Parvati cradling child
Ganesha in her lap. In
visualizing his theme : a four-armed form of the child Ganesha holding
his favourite ‘laddu’ and axe sprawling in his mother’s lap with
absolute satisfaction on face for being its sole occupant with no
rival around, a simple unassuming female form holding in her hand a
Shiva-ling icon with a rosary and flower-garland, and a tiny icon of
Ganesha’s mount mouse, the artist, packing into the contemporary the
ethos of tradition, has been as respectful to both, the tradition and
the contemporaneous. It is with her identity as the mother of Ganesha
that her identity as Parvati and as Shiva’s consort reveals.
Though in an unstitched traditional textile – a sari, but dyed,
printed and worn in the modus revealing modernity, even Europeanism at
least in the sari’s tint, this representation of Parvati spans the
earliest with the latest : the vision of ‘the unborn’ into a frame
‘born to die’. The artist’s creative imagination has a wider
perspective, especially in exploring his subject’s inner and
multi-dimensionality of her being. While portraying a caressing mother
holding her child with her left hand, he has also portrayed a devoted
wife holding in her other hand a symbolic ling-icon representing her
spouse Shiva, and a mind occupied in his thoughts. The Shiva-ling
carried in her right hand is not for her a votive icon for ritual
worship but a living entity, and the flower-garland she has laid
around is an expression of her devotion to him who is her part, not
one beyond or separate from her. She carries a rosary around her
fingers but not turning its beads; it stands for a mind
circumambulating around his name and image.
The four-armed Ganesha, a plumpish child as tender as a velvet toy,
endowed with soft silken transparent skin identical to child Krishna’s
image in Tanjore art, is not unaware of his supreme divine power and
his sectarian role. Besides carrying an axe for protecting the
innocent and weak and punishing the wicked, and a ‘laddu’, symbolising
good, auspicious and riches with which he rewards the right-doers, he
holds one of his other two hands in ‘abhaya’ – protective posture, and
in the fourth, a pair of lotuses. Apart, his form has been conceived
with a peacock feather crest typical of Krishna. Thus, with lotuses in
hands and a peacock crest, this son of Shiva stands in between
Shaivite and Vaishnava lines in a conciliating role. However, in his
demeanour as if seated in an arm-chair, twisted trunk, style of hair
and an air of pride as one enjoying some special privilege, the artist
has conceived this image of Ganesha essentially as a child.
This description by Prof. P.C. Jain and Dr. Daljeet. Prof. Jain specializes on the aesthetics of literature and is the author of numerous books on Indian art and culture. Dr. Daljeet is the curator of the Miniature Painting Gallery, National Museum, New Delhi. They have both collaborated together on a number of books.