Tanjore and Mysore Style of Paintings
Tanjore paintings
are eponymously named after a style of painting that flourished in the temple
town of Tanjore (Tanjavur) in the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu.
Stylistically believed to have emerged in the 16th century
during the reign of Nayakarulers, the art received fresh impetus and
patronage in the late 17th century with the coming of Maratha
rule. Under Maratha Kings, Tanjore was to emerge as a great center of art,
architecture, learning, music and performing arts.
Locally
called Palagai (wooden plank) Padam (image),
this refers to the practice of painting the image on wooden planks, a stylistic
peculiarity of the region. This originally votive art form is believed to have
emerged from a shift in painting murals to more potable formats. The iconography
seen in these images is derived from both theVaisnavite and Shaivite tradition
of Hinduism, though exceptions exist with several painting representing other
religions and secular themes. The latter include durbar scenes and portraits of
sages and rulers.
Tanjore painting
have a brilliant and jewel-like tone that its artistscreated by judiciously
using real gold and silver foil, precious and semipreciousstones, beads,
mirrors, and powdered metals – gold in particular. Besidesthe use of primary
colours – red, green, blue, black and white to depict the Gods, infant Krishna
is often seen in pink with a marble like translucence while Lord Vishnu, and
his incarnations are often depicted with a distinctly green body tone.
The
Mysore school of painting sprang in south Karnataka in the reign of Maharaja Mummudi Krishnaraja Wadiyar (1799-1868).
Under his discerning patronage the older artistic traditions of the region such
as the music, dance, literature and paintings were revived and most of the
surviving traditional paintings can be ascribed to this period. These works
present a wide variety, frommurals to stylistic Mysore paintings on cloth,
paper and wood.
Though
often confused by viewers as being similar, the two styles of paintings vary
and the differences are largely in the techniques used to create these artworks
and in their distinct iconography. The techniques adopted by the Mysore artists
are slightly differentfrom those of the Tanjore School. While the latter used
white lead(Makhisafeda), Mysore artists used Gamboge (yellow)
drawn from the juice of the indigenous tree(RevanaChinnihalu)
giving these paintings a golden tint. Asagainst the high relief of the Tanjore
'Gesso' work, the Mysore schoolpreferred low relief, and used pure gold leaf as
against gold-coated silverleaf handled by Tanjore artists. This purity of gold
leaf enhances the lustre ofthe Mysore paintings and made their work more
durable. The use of glasspieces and pearls employed in the Tanjore style is
also absent in the Mysorepaintings. More elaborate interior landscapesare seen
in Mysore paintings, though both styles frequently showtraditional temple
pavilions and towers.
Tanjore and
Mysore paintings depict episodes from Hindu mythology, epics and the Puranas.
What makes these paintings distinct is the multiple cultural
influences that seem to have permeated this art form from north India, Deccan
and the southern regions of Mysore. These Paintings stand in between the two
Indian traditions of mural/miniature paintings, and sculptures carved in low
relief. Naturalism, as seen in European Renaissance painting, was not the
concern of the South Indianartist with anatomical details being executed
conceptually rather than as norms of realism. Linearity as depicted in both
these styles create a semblance of three dimensionality with the use of light
and shade, low relief modeling achieved through the application of successive
thick coats of glue, colours, embedded cut stones and the manipulation of
varying planes.Bright and warm colours were used essentiallyto heighten
decorative elements in what is known as a 'court style'.
Traditionally
used for private worship and to honour monarchs, Mysore and Tanjore paintings
are a late entrant in the rarified world of museums. The renovated gallery of Tanjore and
Mysore style of paintings at the National Museum, New Delhi displays some of
the finest historic examples of these two styles of painting from the
collection of the Museum, revealing the grand admixture of traditional,
spiritual and eclectic strains in the arts of India.
The
Gallery comprises 88 paintings. Although almost every painting is unique, some
of the masterpieces are examples par excellence.
The
great vitality of these works allows us to understand the easy proliferation of
these singularly distinct religious icons across the world.
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