THE SCULPTURAL SPLENDORS OF MEENAKSHI TEMPLE

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Description

  • AUTHOR: V. VEDACHALAM & G. SETHURAMAN
  • PUBLISHER: ARULMIGHU MEENAKSHI SUNDARESHWARAR TEMPLE
  • LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
  • EDITION: 2019
  • ISBN: 9788193883907
  • PAGES: 196 (THROUGHOUT COLOR ILLUSTRATIONS)
  • COVER: HARDCOVER

Preface

Madurai, one of the ancient cities of the South India, is well known as the "Athens of the South" and "Mediterranean Emporium of the East" from very ancient period. It served as the cultural capital of the Tamils for several centuries. It was the seat of the Academy of Poets (Sangam) many centuries before and after the beginning of the Common Era. The history and culture of any region, in the Indian sub-continent, often centers round a temple. This is actually true in the case of Madurai where the temple has made a significant contribution not only to the religious life of the people, but also served as the nucleus around which the social and cultural life of the people revolves. As the city has the continuous history from very ancient past to this day, the temple there in also has been growing continuously through the centuries starting from a small thatched shed to the vast temple complex exhibiting a unique architectural and artistic idiom called "Madurai School of Art". The temple accommodates thousands of sculptures which not only depict the epic and puranic themes but also reflect the contemporary social, cultural and folk traditions. The present book "Sculptural Wonders of Meenakshi Temple" explains in detail the sculptural embellishments and their social and cultural importance in a systematic and scientific manner. It would be of much useful to the general readers, students and researchers to understand the sculptural beauty and their legendary background.

This work is a collective venture by many who earnestly involved in this task along with the authors. The authors express their deep gratitude to Thiru Karumuttu T. Kannan, Chairman, Arulmigu Meenakshi Sundaresvara Temple, Commissioner HREtCE, and the Shri Natarajan, Joint Commissioner/ Executive Officer and other officials of Arulmigu Meenakshi Sundaresvara Temple, Madurai for their kind cooperation and permission to publish this book. But for their support and encouragement the book would not have been brought out within a short span.

The authors sincerely thank Thiru J.Lakshiminarayanan Ft Thiru R. Prasad for their concept, creative and fine photographic skill employed in this work. They earnestly thank Pulavar Thiru. T. Vijayaragunathan for his valuable suggestions and encouragement.

 

Introduction

Sculptural Art of Tamilnadu

Indian sculpture is one of the important modes of visual communication of religious ideas. The images of gods and goddesses are the representations of philosophical, mythological and symbolical aspects of various sportive, incarnations, and attributes of different sects sometimes claiming superiority of the one over the others. The Hindu temple is conceived as a microcosm or a model of the universe, the macrocosm. As the cosmos is an idealized one, the sculptures which adorn various parts of the temple are also conceived and made in an idealized style. The earliest Indian sculptures of the historic period are the products of the Buddhist artists, as in the case of architecture and they depict mostly themes from the Jataka tales and some of them are loose sculptures.

The basis of the Hindu temple sculpture was laid during the classical Gupta period (4th-6th centuries AD). Beauty, dignity, refinement, simplicity, freedom from sensuality and thoroughly Indian are some of the unique features of the Gupta sculptures. From the Gupta region, the sculptural tradition reached its culmination and spread all over India. The post- Gupta dynasties which patronized Hinduism furthered this tradition in their region in their own regional idiom. This observance spread to the extreme south, the Tamil country through the Chalukyan region, where Badami, Pattadakkal and Aihole served as the cradle of Dravidian and Nagara style of architecture as well as the Hindu sculptural tradition.

in the Tamil country, the sculptural art was familiar to the Sangam Tamils. The artists were experts in stucco (sudai) works, which was but a development of the simple ceramic art of pottery or terracotta. Being perishable, now we have no trace of their art, except the mention about them in contemporary literature. Tavar spoken of in the Silappadikaram, a post Sangam work denotes the images worshipped in the temples of those days.

Pallava Sculptures (c. AD 590-850)

The earliest available sculptures of the Tamils belong to the Pallava-Pandya period, since they are carved on the walls of their rock sanctuaries. The Latin word sculpture means 'to cut' or 'to carve out'. Now it means not only figures carved and moulded, but also those cast in metal. The sculpture may be done completely "in the round", so that it is fully three dimensional, or carved in " relief', so that it projects solidly from a flat surface. if it projects boldly it is "high relief" and if projects slightly it is " low relief' or " bas-relief'.

The sculptural tradition introduced by the Pallavas and their contemporary Pandyas was followed by all subsequent dynasties like the Cholas, Vijayanagar-Nayak and so on. The Pallava sculpture throughout the period maintains its distinctive feature of tall, strong bodies with large broad waist girdle loops. In most of the Pallava figures the yajnopavita (sacred thread) goes over the right arm which feature is also seen in a few Chola and Pandya sculptures. The real achievement of the Pallavas in the sculptural art belongs to the successors of Mahendravarma Pallava 1, especially Rajasimha, under whom quality in sculpture improved considerably as seen in the famous narrative panels at Mamallapuram, Kanchipuram and Thiruchirappalli. The huge bas- relief panel of Gangadhara in the upper cave, Thiruchirappalli is the earliest masterpiece in the Tamil sculptural history. The symmetry of this composition bestows on it a mandala like character.

Sculpture seems to have had precedence over architecture in the Varaha mandapa and Mahishamardini mandapa at Mamallapuram. All these bas- reliefs here being masterpieces, some stand out strikingly) the Adhivaraha and the Trivikrama panels of the Varaha mandapa, both showing a rare combination of dynamic movement of the body and the yogic static of the mind, as seen on their faces (the Varaha and Trivikrama have been the favourite themes of the earliest dynasties like Guptas, Chalukyas, Pallavas, Pandyas and Adiyamans for they symbolize the Thakravartin (conquering emperor) concept of the Brahmanical Hinduism.

Later, the imperial Cholas, being staunch Saivites preferred Tripurantaka instead). ii) the Mahishamardini, the most remarkable for its virility, dynamism and grace. The eight armed youthful spinster Durga sitting astride her charging lion mount and the buffalo headed demon fast retreating is a forceful composition. iii) the opposite panel to the above shows Ananthasayi in yogasayana and it is a picture of peace, in contrast to the former. iv) the Somaskanda form of Siva filling the entire back wall of the Mahishamardini mandapa is a unique contribution of the Pallavas to the Hindu iconography and iconology. v) the Govardhan panel occupying the entire face of a rock and vi) the descent of the Ganga.

The last mentioned is the most outstanding work of art in Mamallapuram. "No magician- sculptors, anywhere in the world, have ever worked on a fresco as large as this rock- surface. The flow of figures transcends definition. The energies fuse in to each other. The spell of the myth integrates the awareness in to the belief in Arjuna/ Bahiratha asking for the boon". This gigantic open- air relief on two large boulders (20'high x 80' long) with a narrow fissure in between used to serve as the Heavenly Ganga river descending on earth, is a unique one in the entire range of Indian art. it contains over a hundred figures of celestials, men and beasts. The massive elephants with their calves lend an air of realism and dignity to the entire composition.

The transition from sculpture as architecture, to the structural temple, where the carving adorn the temples, was brought about in Kanchipuram during the reign of Rajasimha, in the first quarter of the eighth century AD. The Kailasanatha temple at Kanchipuram is a sculptural museum by itself with huge number of sculptures depicting various aspects of Siva, which is perhaps the earliest of its kind in the structural temples of Tamilnadu. This tradition was continued by Rajasimha's successors in their temples at Kanchipuram, Tiruttani, Takkolam and Alambakkam.

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