Gods and Rishis Praying Vishnu for Eliminating Kansa

$255
Item Code: HN20
Artist: Kailash Raj
Specifications:
Water Color Painting on PaperArtist:Kailash Raj
Dimensions 10 inch X 7.3 inch
Handmade
Handmade
Free delivery
Free delivery
Fully insured
Fully insured
100% Made in India
100% Made in India
Fair trade
Fair trade
This colourful miniature represents gods, Brahma, Shiva, Indra etceteras and munis, Narad and others, paying homage to Lord Vishnu. The Puranic literature acclaims many a time and variously Vishnu's superiority over other gods. This, however, is not out of his superior position that these gods are there to pay him homage. These texts come out with abundant occasions when Vishnu appeared before Shiva or Brahma with alike folded hands. These legends invariably relate to this or that of the occasions when these gods were required to lend a hand in eliminating someone or the other of the demons or wicked ones who had been destroying the Dharma and had rendered by his atrocities people's life miserable. These legends have a thin dividing line. Whenever it was a demon born with a human frame, and a human born was required to accomplish his destruction, it was invariably Lord Vishnu who in his incarnation killed him. Of the Gods Trio Vishnu alone could incarnate in full human birth. Incarnations of Shiva are only in parts, that is, anshavatara, and are rare and that of Brahma almost never. Shiva accomplished his exploits against demons in his own form. Brahma is not known to have accomplished any individually. Hence, the depicted event relates to the elimination of someone on the earth to accomplish which Vishnu was required to take to human form. And, it is in all certainties the occasion when gods and Rishis-munis approached him for redeeming the earth from the atrocities of Mathura's demon king Kansa, i.e., the event is a precursor to Krishnavatara.

As the Bhagavata Purana has it, Kalanemi, the ferocious demon and the founder of one of the two clans of demons, was born as Kansa from the womb of the wife of Mathura's king Ugrasen. One day, when the queen was in the royal garden, a gandharva, by the name of Dramil, disguised as Ugrasen, had sex with her. She conceived and the child, so born, was Kansa. The first thing that Kansa did was to usurp his father Ugrasen's throne by throwing him inside the bars. After he proclaimed himself as Mathura's king, his atrocities were rampant. His courtiers, Tranavarta, Bakasura, Putana, Shakatasura, Vatsasura, Aghasura, Pralamba, Kesi, Mustaka, Dhenuka, Chanoona, Vivida and others, were as much cruel and had rendered the life of all, especially of Yadavas, Andhakas, Vrashanis etceteras, extremely miserable. The atrocities inflicted by them had shaken even the formidable earth. The earth finally approached Brahma and prayed him to redeem her from Kansa and his minions. On her prayer Brahma, along with Shiva and other gods, went to Kshirasagara, the ocean of milk, where resided Vishnu with his consort Lakshmi. Vishnu assured them to incarnate on the earth from the womb of Devaki, the wife of Vasudeo and the sister of Kansa.

It is this occasion that the painting renders. Some folios, depicting this episode, as the one from the 18th Kangra in the collection of the National Museum, New Delhi, include in their renditions a cow also to represent the earth. Here the artist makes the presence of the earth felt by giving her greater prominence and a large proportion of his canvas. As the gods, praying Lord Vishnu, have been planted on the earth part, they are obviously presenting her case. Thus, symbolically the earth is also one of the petitioners. The simple landscape, consisting of merely a land part, ocean and a horizontal line of clouds, has been exquisitely treated. The plain green part, tinted with blood red shading revealing from underneath, defines the melancholic face and correspondingly the miseries of the earth. In contrast to her, the ocean, black and dark, abounds in glow and glory, which the lotuses in various stages of their life cycle represent. The multi-hooded Shesh and rippling ocean, both rendered in single colours, have been wondrously treated. Vishnu, though reclining, is in full regalia, carrying his disc, mace and lotus and wearing the long garland of Parijata flowers. His face is wrathfully tense as if in the process of taking a decision. The face of Lakshmi depicts great concern, perhaps, in sympathy to the earth, another female like her. The drooping faces of the bare-footed gods have been powerfully rendered.

This description by Prof. P.C. Jain and Dr Daljeet. Prof. Jain specializes on the aesthetics of ancient Indian literature. Dr Daljeet is the chief curator of the Visual Arts Gallery at the National Museum of India, New Delhi. They have both collaborated on numerous books on Indian art and culture.


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