Abhisandhita Nayika: Radha and Krishna estranged by a quarrel, 19th century. Northern India, Himachal Pradesh, Pahari school, Kangra. Opaque color and gold leaf on paper. Gift of George P. Bickford 1970-10-5
Page from a Birha poem of separation and longing, showing Radha with her attendants in a grove. India, Rajasthan, possibly Bundi or Kotah School, 17th century. Opaque watercolor on paper. Gift of George P. Bickford. 1970-10-3
Kakubha Ragini. India, Rajasthan, possibly Bundi School, 18th century. Opaque watercolor on paper. Gift of George P. Bickford, 1970-10-4
Portrait of Bhim Singh with Counselor, ca. 1820. Northwestern India, Rajasthan, Mewar. Opaque color on paper. Gift of Alvin O. Bellak 1991-23-9
Exhibition
On View
Feb 28, 2019–Feb 28, 2019
Main Level, West Gallery

This exhibition features works from KAM’s collection of exquisite paintings predominantly from Rajasthan and the Punjab hills, in the northwestern region of the Indian subcontinent.

Co-sponsored by the India Studies Fund, administered by the Center for South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Illinois

Many of these works were commissioned by royals of the Rajput or Hindu, princely courts that came under the suzerainty of the Mughal Empire between the late1500s and 1800s. Their enthusiastic arts patronage led to the flourishing of a wide range of regional painting styles and subjects. Especially prevalent are images drawn from the great Hindu epics in which stories of love, longing, and devotion are recounted through the deeds of Hindu deities and their avatars on earth.

Also popular and showing the centuries-long comingling of Rajput and Mughal artistic preferences, are depictions of court life and aristocratic portraiture. The exhibition also features a selection of richly illustrated, devotional narratives commissioned by patrons as acts of piety, and to accrue divine merit for the next life.

While local Indian painters had been producing illustrated texts on horizontal palm leaves for Jain, Buddhist, and Hindu devotees from as early as 1000 CE, the introduction of papermaking from central Asia via the expansion of the Mughal empire freed artists to work in larger, vertical page formats.

However, Rajput paintings were not bound or displayed on walls. They were held close to the body, to be viewed intimately, one at a time, then shared with companions by being passed from hand to hand. Many were also passed on to friends and allies and traveled long distances as precious gifts. Devotional paintings were also created for pilgrims at temple sites who carried them on their journeys home. Others were used as visual aids in itinerant storytelling, or for prayer and recitation. Many artists were themselves itinerant, working in different court ateliers over their careers. Another kind of “mobility” is found in the almost synesthetic blending of musical, literary, and visual metaphor that animate the images themselves.

From Hand to Hand explores the performative dimensions of these evocative paintings. The exhibition’s related programming asks more broadly how these works narrate themselves into the contemporary politics of place and identity in South Asia today. KAM’s collection of Indian paintings was built through the generous donations of distinguished collectors George P. Bickford, Alvin O. Bellak, and Rachel and Allen S. Weller, between 1965 and 2003. A selection of these works was recently conserved through a grant from the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation.

Curated by Allyson Purpura, senior curator and curator of Global African Art, with research assistance from curatorial interns Yutong Shi and Samit Sinha.

Krannert Art Museum acknowledges and thanks University of Illinois faculty Jessica Vantine Birkenholtz, Assistant Professor in the Department of Religion; Rini Bhattacharya Mehta, Assistant Professor in the Department of Comparative World Literatures; Hans Hock, Professor Emeritus in the Department of Linguistics; and Dede Fairchild Ruggles, Professor and Chair of the Department of Landscape Architecture; as well as Krista Gulbransen, Assistant Professor of Art History at Whitman College, for their generous consultation in the preparation of this exhibition.