Erotic motif in Indian Art
Erotic motif in Indian Art
PERHAPS the most important feature
of erotic imagery in early and medieval India, whether in the temples of
Khajuraho or the Konark temple complex in Orissa is its importance in the
religious iconography of this period. In the Chandella temples of Khajuraho,
built between the 10th and 12th centuries, erotic sculpture constitutes less
than 10 per cent of the artistic representation. Even so, the variety and
boldness of erotic expression here, its spatial positioning on the temples, and
the remarkable detail of its execution, suggest that it was meant to hold the
attention of the pilgrim and devotee, and was an essential part of the
temple-going experience.
The self-appointed guardians of
Hinduism and Hindu culture today often turn violent when Hindu goddesses are
shown nude in artistic representation. The imagery of Khajuraho offers with
unambiguous visual clarity the role of sexuality in certain cultural and
religious customs of Hinduism. The broad umbrella of Hinduism could accommodate
diverse cultural and philosophical strands - of renunciation, asceticism and
detachment on the one hand, and of religio-cultural practices in which sex
played an important part, on the other. And it was the religious environment of
the temple rather than any secular space that formed the setting for the
depiction of erotic themes.
In a scholarly study of erotic
sculpture in India, Devangana Desai has traced the historical development of
erotic motifs, the role of sex in a religion which sanctioned sexual depiction
in temple art, and the socio-economic milieu in which sexual depiction was
sustained and glorified (Erotic Sculpture of India: A Socio-Cultural Study,
Tata McGraw-Hill Publishing Company, New Delhi, 1975). Desai has recently
published a book exclusively on Khajuraho (The Religious Imagery of
Khajuraho, Franco-Indian Research Pvt Ltd, Mumbai, 1997) in which she has
extensively used textual and inscriptional sources to contextualise the art and
architecture of Khajuraho.
N. RAM
The
imagery of Khajuraho offers with unambiguous clarity the role of sexuality in
certain cultural and religious customs of Hinduism. Here, a representation of
Siva with his consort Parvathi.

By the 10th century, the depiction
of sex in art entered a qualitatively new phase. Erotic motifs were no longer
confined to less prominent spaces in temples. All forms of sexual depiction,
ranging from the sexual and auto-erotic attitudes of men and women, including
gods and goddesses, members of the aristocracy, and ascetics to group sexuality
and bestiality were displayed ostentatiously on the exteriors and in the
interiors of the temples. This was a period when in Central India, feudalism
developed and temple building became an important activity and statement of
power of the feudal ruling classes. Temples became larger and grander with
ample space for artistic expression. According to Devangana Desai the four
principal dynasties that spread across Central India - the Chandellas of
Jejakabhukti (who built the Khajuraho temples), the Kalachuris of Dahala, the
Khachchapaghatas of Gwalior and the Paramaras of Malwa - engaged in extensive
temple building, which shared common building conventions despite differences
owing to the stamp of the particular dynasty and other local factors.
It was under the Chandella rulers
that Khajuraho acquired religious and political importance. It was a place of
Sakta worship in the 9th century. By the middle of the 10th century a fully
developed style of Nagara temple architecture emerged. Devangana Desai has
divided the temples of Khajuraho into two groups based on the treatment of
erotic motifs in their art. The first group comprises the structures built
between A.D. 950 and 1050, which include the Lakshmana, Parsvanatha,
Vishvanatha, Devi Jagadamba, Chitragupta and Kandariya Mahadeva shrines. The
second group, constructed between A.D. 1050 and 1150, includes the Vamana,
Adinatha, Javari, Chaturbhuja and Duladeva temples. The shrines in the first
group, built when the Chandellas were in the ascendant and Khajuraho became the
capital city of a wealthy ruling class, depict a large number of erotic motifs,
whereas those constructed when the dynasty was on the decline have fewer
representations of a sexual nature.
Different erotic motifs are
represented on the Lakshmana temple; a Vaishnava shrine built in the Nagara
style and one of the earliest of the temples to be built in Khajuraho by
Yasovarman. The temple's consecration took place under Yasovarman's son
Dhangadeva. The motifs - of coital and pre-coital couples and erotic groups -
are depicted in prominent and recessed parts of the temple. According to
Devangana Desai, one of the most frenzied orgiastic scenes in Indian art is
depicted on the Lakshmana temple on a one-foot-long frieze, which also depicts
persons involved in the preparation of an aphrodisiac. Erotic motifs are
present also at the Parsvanatha temple, a Jain temple built soon after the
construction of the Lakshmana temple. This is significant as Jains were known
for their puritanical attitude towards sex. Devangana Desai suggests that the
presence of erotic representation may have been owing to the influence of
Tantrism on Jainism in the medieval period; it may also have been because of
the fact that the same guild of artisans built the Lakshmana and Parsvanatha
temples and introduced common motifs on them. The erotic representation on the
latter is, however, more restrained than on the former - orgiastic
representation, for example, is absent in the Parsvanatha temple.
The other 11th century temples
belonging to the first group - the shrines of Visvanatha, Chitragupta, Devi
Jagadamba and Kandariya Mahadeva - present more or less the same kind of erotic
images. Of these the Visvanatha and Kandariya Mahadeva temples, the largest and
the most beautiful of the Khajuraho temples, are Saiva shrines. The Devi
Jagadamba temple was originally a Vaisnava shrine, and the Chitragupta temple
is the only Saura shrine on the site. Devangana Desai points to the fact of the
more chaste and restrained divine erotic group in the Visvanatha temple being
replaced by the orgiastic group in the Kandariya Mahadeva temple built 25 years
later, which supports the hypothesis that there was an increase in sensuality
in this period. The fact that people who figure in the orgiastic
representations in Khajuraho are members of high society or ascetics also
suggest that the occasions depicted may have been religious rituals in which
royal families and Tantriks participated. The second group of temples were
built between the middle of the 11th century and the middle of the 12th
century, a period which saw the political decline of the Chandellas. These
temples, which belong to the Jaina, Vaishnava and Saiva faiths, treat erotic
motifs with more restraint. This has nothing to do with sectarian differences.
In fact, Devangana Desai points to the interesting fact that shrines of the
same faith, situated on the same site and built within 50 years of each other,
treat erotic motifs with considerable difference. That there was a decline in the
affluence of the patron of the temples during this period may partially explain
the sobering in the sexual representation. Alongside there was also a change in
attitudes and something of a backlash against the milieu of eroticism, says
Devangana Desai, pointing to the Prabhodachandrodaya, a pronouncedly
anti-erotic play written by the court dramatist, Krisna Misra.
Sexual depiction in religious art
first served a magico-religious function. The worldly interest in sex changed
the sacred nature of sexual depictions leading to its secularisation and
sensualisation and to it acquiring an aesthetic of its own. The historical
progression of erotic imagery in Indian art, Devangana Desai argues, reveals
the constant interaction of its magico-religious origins, which centre around
fetishistic beliefs and fertility cults, and the worldly, pleasure-giving
aspects of sex, outlined in the texts on eroticism written at that time. The
profuse depiction of sex in temple art from A.D. 900 onwards suggests the
permeation of Tantric elements into Puranic Hinduism and its influence on all
major religions. The highly secretive nature of the Tantric religion, including
its sexual-religious practices, does not fit in with the public display of
erotic themes in temples at this time. Tantrism may have influenced erotic
temple art, without being functionally related to its cultist and secretive
aspects.
An
important socio-cultural factor that contributed to the profusion of erotic
imagery in temples was the growth of feudalism and the spurt in temple building
activity - not just in Khajuraho but all over India - by feudal chiefs,
military officers and other dignitaries. These persons competed among
themselves in constructing splendid and ornate palaces. Feudalism also led to
the disintegration of centralised polities and the strengthening of local
interests and forces. Regionalism and the development of regional conventions
strongly influenced art forms, just as they influenced other aspects of
cultural life, such as literature, language and costume. This had its influence
on the erotic motif, between A.D. 900 and AD 1400, which got standardised and
cannonised into regional patterns of art.
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