Rupam*
THE appearance of this superb quarterly admirable in its artistic get-up and
its fine reproductions of Indian sculpture and painting, admirable in the
accomplished excellence of its matter, – the name of the editor, Mr. O. C. Gangoly, the one man most especially fitted by his knowledge and capacity for
this work, is of itself a sufficient guarantee of excellence, -
is a significant indication of the progress that is being made in the revival
of the aesthetic mind of India. Assailed and corrupted in a time of cultural
decline and arrest of its creative and artistic faculty by an alien aesthesis
and ideals antithetic to its own spirit, it is returning to a right view and
understanding of its past greatness, and though much way has still to be made
before there can be any universal recovery of the artistic eye and taste, the
first steps have been taken with some rapidity and firmness and are all in the
right direction. This new and fine effort of the Indian Society of Oriental Arts
is likely to be of invaluable aid towards this reawakening; its magnificent
illustrations are in themselves a revelation of the old beauty and greatness
and, admirably selected and supported by illuminating articles,
ought to be sufficient to open even the most blinded vision to the meaning
and value of our ancient painting and sculpture. Page-300 from one of the great styles and periods shows, as is justly said, and shows very perfectly, the Indian principle in the treatment of the human figure, the suppression of small particulars and trivial details in order to secure an extreme simplicity of form and contour, – the best condition for accomplishing the principal. object of the Indian sculptor which was to fill the form with the utmost power of spiritual force and significance. The figure of this princely doorkeeper of the temple in its union of calm, grave, sweet and restful serenity with a latent and restrained heroic energy in its stillness, noted by the writer as the distinctive power of this creation, is indeed equal, as he suggests, in its dignity and repose to any Greek statue, but in it carries in it a more profound and profound meaning: it is a prefect interpretation of the still and intense Godward feeling, seized in one deep mood, in one fixed moment of it, which was the soul of the great ages of Indian religion. There is here a perfection of form with a perfection of significance. This restraint in power, this contained fullness opening an amplitude of infinite suggestion, is not rare or exceptional, it is a frequent greatness in the art of Indian. The second article on Garuda in Bengal and Java by Akshaya Kumar Maitreya, besides its interesting and discerning treatment of its subject, the inception and humanising of the Garuda figure and the artistic use of the my thus, touches an issue which has not yet, I think, received sufficient consideration, the place of the art of Gauda in the development of the spirit of Indian sculpture. The putting side by side of the two sculptures from Java and Varendra, on one side the heroic force, majesty, dignity and beauty of the ancient art in one of its finest developments, on the other the moved nobility, grace and loveliness and the fervour of spiritual emotion and tenderness of a time when the antique Aryan spirit was softening into the sweetness of the religions of Bhakti, makes of itself an illuminating suggestion. This sculpture is eloquent of that transition and the art of Gauda with its lyrical sweetness of emotion and, at its best, suggestive depths, begins the curve of the stream of spiritual feeling which came down through the Vaishnava art and poetry, found its most gracious and lucid embodiment in the poets of Bengal, has now taken, enriched by new elements, a large and living development Page – 301 in the lyrics of Tagore and the paintings of the Calcutta school and has yet a
vital part to play in the spiritual future of India. Page -302 rical monograph I found myself brought up short by
the sweepingly positive but hardly judicial and certainly not judicious
statement that "the Deccan like the North was inspired by the Greek and
Roman arts and the marbles of Amaravati can be compared to the sculptures of
Gandhara". The plain fact is that whatever outside influences there mayor
may not have been in India as elsewhere, even the earliest work shows a
characteristic Indian mentality and touch; and as for Gandharan art, it has the
air of an inefficient attempt of the Hellenistic mind to absorb this spirit
rather than an effort of India to imitate Greece. And in any case the great
characteristic work could no more have been the creation of a foreign mind or
of its influence than the sculptures of Phidias can be attributed to an
Assyrian, Egyptian or Chinese origin. A psychological insensibility to the
spiritual significance of Indian work is probably at the root of these errors
and, so long as that subsists, the most erudite knowledge will be no protection
against gross misunderstandings. Page -303 |