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BBC NEWS, London
Guardians of the British MuseumThe new exhibition at the British Museum in London demonstrates the rich journey of the spiritual art of India. Titled ancient India: Living traditions, it brings together 189 excellent objects that cover the centuries.
Visitors can explore everything: from 2000 years of sculptures and paintings to complex narrative panels and manuscripts, revealing the stunning evolution of spiritual expression in India.
Art from the Indian subcontinent transferred a deep transformation between 200 bits and AD600. The images that reflected the gods, the goddesses, the supreme preachers and the enlightened souls of three ancient religions – Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism – were converted from symbolic to more recognition from human form.
While three religions shared common cultural roots – worshiping the spirit of ancient nature, such as powerful snakes or a festival peacock – they talked dramatic shifts in religious iconography during this main period, which continues to have the modern relevance of two millennia from each other.
“Today, we cannot imagine the honoring Hindu, Jain or the Buddhist Divine Spirit or the Deity without human form, is it wrong?
The exhibition studies both continuity and changes in the sacred art of India through five sections, starting with the spirits of nature, after which subsections dedicated to each of the three religions, and completing the distribution of denominations and their art outside India in other parts of the world, like Cambodia and China.
Guardians of the British Museum
Guardians of the British MuseumThe central part of the Buddhist exhibition section is a bright bilateral sandstone that shows the evolution of the Buddha – perhaps the most different in the reflection of this great transition.
One side, cut approximately in AD250, will reveal in human form with intricate jewelry, and on the other – cut earlier than 50-1bc – it is symbolically presented through a tree, empty throne and trail.
The sculpture is from the sacred shrine in Amaraus (in the southeast of India) – it was once part of a decorative round base or a Buddhist monument.
In order for this transformation to be presented on “one single panel from one shrine, quite unusual,” says Ms. Jansari.
Guardians of the British MuseumIn the Hindu section, another early bronze statue reflects the gradual evolution of sacred visual images through the reflection of the goddesses.
The figure resembles a Yakisha – a powerful primordial natural spirit, which can give both “wealth and fertility, as well as death and illness” – cognitive through its flower headdress, jewelry and a complete figure.
But it also includes several weapons that keep specific sacred objects that have become characteristic of how Hindu women’s deities were presented in the following centuries.
Guardians of the British MuseumThe exhibition also includes exciting examples of Jain’s religious art, which are largely focused on 24 enlightened teachers called Tirthankaras.
The earliest ideas were found on a shy pink sandstone, dated about 2000 years old, and began to recognize through the sacred symbol of the infinite knot on the breast of teachers.
Museum of Ashmoley, Oxford UniversityThe sculptures ordered in these religions were often conducted in general seminars in the ancient city of material, which, according to curators, explains why there is a marked similarity between them.
Unlike other shows in South Asia, the exhibition is unique because it is a “first in history” a view of the origin of all three religious artistic traditions together, not separately, says Ms. Jansari.
In addition, it carefully draws attention to the origin of each object at the exhibition, with short explanations about the journey through different hands, its acquisition by museums and so on.
The show emphasizes the intriguing detail, such as the fact that many donors of Buddhist art, in particular, were women. But this did not answer why the transformation of the material in the visual language took place.
“It remains a million dollars.” If no more evidence comes, we’re not going to know. But the unusual prosperity of figurative art tells us that people really came to the idea of ​​imagining the divine as a man. “
Guardians of the British MuseumThe show is a multi -seans – with fragrances, drapes, sounds of nature and live colors designed to cause an atmosphere of active Hindu, Buddhist and Jane religious shrines.
“There is so much in these sacred spaces, and yet there is innate peace and peace. I wanted to get it out,” says Ms. Jansari, who collaborated with several designers, artists and community partners to gather it.
Guardians of the British MuseumSigns on display are screens that reflect short films of practicing believers from each of the religions in Britain. These emphasize the point that it is not only “ancient art but also the tradition of living”, which is constantly relevant to millions of people in the UK and other parts of the globe, far beyond the borders of modern India.
The exhibition is leaving the collection of South Asia of the British Museum with 37 credits from private creditors and national and international museums and libraries in the UK, Europe and India.
Ancient India: Living traditions are shown at the British Museum in London, from May 22 to October 19.
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