Showing posts with label India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India. Show all posts

Sunday, September 10, 2023

Art Eyewitness Essay: The Face of the Buddha at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

 

The Face of the Buddha

Tree & Serpent:
 Early Buddhist Art in India, 200 BCE-400 CE 

Metropolitan Museum of Art,
July 21 to November 13, 2023

Part II

By Ed Voves

Original Photography by Anne Lloyd

The life journey of Siddharta Gautama, from crown prince of the Sakya Kingdom in ancient India to the transcendent status as the Buddha, is one of the most important spiritual events in world history. The depiction of the events in Buddha's life and his path to enlightenment is vitally significant in the story of art, as well.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art is currently presenting a magnificent exhibition of early Buddhist art, entitled Tree & Serpent. The Met's exhibit stresses the importance of the rise of Buddhist art in the southern region of India known as the Deccan. 



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2023)
 Gallery view of Tree & Serpent: Early Buddhist Art in India,
 200 BCE-400 CE at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Since Buddhism later spread southward to Sri Lanka and then to Southeast Asia, the importance of the role of the Deccan is very important, indeed. The way that Buddhism evolved as a religion and the manner in which it is  presented in terms of visual art still bear the impress of the Deccan experience, from 200 BCE to the year 400 of our current era.

It is a complex story, however, as I commented in my initial review of Tree & Serpent - although one which the Metropolitan curators, led by John Guy, the Met's great scholar of South Asian art, present in a very cogent and insightful way.

The Tree & Serpent exhibition exceeded almost all of my expectations. Yet, I was left with a  perplexing question regarding the profoundly moving statues of the enlightened Buddha, grouped together in the final gallery of the exhibition. 



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2023)
 A view of the concluding gallery at the Tree & Serpent exhibition,
 showing statues of the Buddha from the 2nd to 7th centuries

Here in the radiantly-gold gallery at the end of the exhibit were images of the Buddha which conform to what non-specialists in Asian art – like myself – regard as “Buddhist art.” 

The art on view in the preceding galleries of Tree & Serpent is very different in format from these statues of the Buddha. Where was the connection between the earlier sculpted narrative reliefs showing scenes from the life of the Buddha and these serene, solitary sculptures?  



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2023) 
 Statue of the Buddha, Nelakondapalli monastic region, 3rd century, 
and Temple step ("moonstone") from Sri Lanka, ca. 8th century

The complex wrinkle in the story of Buddhist art is mainly due, I believe, to the fact that the Buddha preached religious truths which, initially, had little regard for aesthetic or artistic concerns.

“Beauty is nothing to me,” the Buddha proclaimed in his earliest sermons, the Dasadhamma Sutta, “neither the beauty of the body, nor that which comes from dress.” 

India, however, is a land bursting with fertility.  Life force is strong and vigorous, demanding forms of visual representation which Buddhism, for all of its otherworldly austerity, eventually embraced. The ancient nature cults which existed prior to Buddhism were co-opted, as we can see in such works as the lively, erotically-charged statue of Śrī Lakmī, Goddess of Abundance, 



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2023)
 Śrī Lakmī, Goddess of Abundance, 2nd century 

If the devotees of Buddhism made an accommodation with nature deities like Śrī Laki, there still existed a “bridge too far” which they did not cross for nearly five hundred years. The depiction of the Buddha's physical likeness remained a "taboo" practice across much of the time period covered by Tree & Serpent.

As numerous carved bas-reliefs show, there was no prohibition on presenting scenes from the life and the legend of the Buddha. But the Buddha had to be represented symbolically. A sacred flame, a pair of footprints, a Dharma wheel or an empty throne, these are what was permissible for an artist to use to denote the Buddha's presence.

.


Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) 
Railing Pillar Medallion:
 Tree Shrine Marking the Buddha’s Wakening, ca. 150 –100 BCE 

Clearly represented on the railing pillar medallion, above, are the Bodhi tree under which the Buddha attained enlightenment, two kneeling female devotees and the throne seat (āsana) marking the spot where the Buddha sat, but no image of the Buddha.

That is how this most important feature of Buddhist art continued to be treated, even when the great emperor, Ashoka (304-232 BCE), ruler over much of the Indian subcontinent, embraced Buddhism. An empty throne is not exactly an image which a mighty monarch is likely to favor. Yet, so it remained.

Shortly before Ashoka's reign began, another contender for dominion over India appeared. Alexander the Great seized control of several provinces in the upper Indus Valley, along with much of present day Afghanistan, on the dubious premise that these regions had been ruled by the Persians, whose empire he had overthrown. 



A Hellenistic Greek Statuette of a Rider Wearing an Elephant Hide Cloak,
 possibly Alexander the Great, 3rd century BCE 
Metropolitan Museum of Art photo

With Alexander's army, marched Hellenistic art and culture. The actual Macedonian/Greek occupation of Indian territory was brief, outliving Alexander by only a few years. Hellenistic culture was more resilient, in part because some of  Alexander's outposts in Afghanistan evolved into small Greek-speaking kingdoms. Greek art in the east, generally referred to as the art of Gandhara from the name of its most productive locale, remained a creative force for several centuries. 

Over the years, a lively, often heated, debate has contested whether the example of Greek Gandhara art motivated Buddhist artists to begin painting or sculpting portraits of the Buddha, thus abolishing the age-old ban. 

Indian scholars and art curators have countered claims that the introduction of Greek art initiated life-like portraiture of the Buddha and standards of artistic realism in the subcontinent. Indian artists, including those working in the Deccan, had long been creating images of gods and men evoking naturalism of a very high order, particularly in the monumental likenesses of nature deities known as yakshas and yakshis. 



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
 Head of a Yaksha, from Mathura, 1st century BCE


Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
 Head of a Yaksha, from Sanchi Stupa, Madhya Pradesh, 1st century

This "pro-India" stance is based on convincing evidence. However, one has only to leave the Tree & Serpent exhibition and walk to the Met's Asian Art Galleries to find brilliant examples of Gandhara sculptures which seemingly resolve this issue in favor of the Greeks.

The Met's Gandhara treasures are such an "embarrassment of riches" that it would be difficult to pick one or two to make the case for the decisive influence of Greek art on the evolution of Buddhist portraiture. 



 Gandharan Buddha, from the Takht-i-bahi Monastery, 3rd century
Metropolitan Museum of Art photo

High on the list of such Gandharan masterpieces is the astonishing statue of the Buddha (above), dating to the 3rd century.  Scholars believes that this Buddha was made for the Takht-i-bahi Monastery, located near the strategic Khyber Pass which gave access to trade routes to central Asia and China's Silk Road.



Gandharan Buddha (detail of above)

Sculpted in grey schist, a dense and difficult stone to carve, this Buddha evokes the spirit and form of images of Apollo which intrepid Greeks erected wherever they journeyed throughout the ancient world.

 And not just the Greeks but Roman merchants, too, brought Western influences to India via the flourishing seaborne trade for spices during the first to third centuries, the age of the Pax Romana. 

The Tree & Serpent exhibition displays several examples of Roman provincial-quality metal objects which reached India as part of this long-distance commerce. But even more intriguing from the standpoint of the present essay is a small bronze Buddha, dating to the  first  to mid-second centuries. It is currently displayed in the Met's Asian galleries.



Seated Buddha, from Gandhara, 1st to mid-2nd century 
Metropolitan Museum of Art photo

With his head framed by a distinctive, serrated halo and his hand held-up in a gesture of welcome, this small statue reflects the spirituality of Buddhism. The Met's leading scholar on Gandharan art,  Kurt Behrendt, has made a close study of this work of art. Behrendt traced "numerous connections with Roman imperial portraits of the first century A.D., especially those of Nero..." 

That the deranged emperor, Nero, might serve as a model for the Buddha is an alarming thought. But the fact that this bronze statue was made in Gandhara, not imported from Rome, shows that Western art conventions were indeed influencing the way that the face of the Buddha was being portrayed by artists in the northern areas of the Indian subcontinent.

In the final analysis, there is no need or reason to make an "either/or" choice, Gandharan or Deccan, as the decisive influence in the revolutionary shift in the portraiture of the Buddha. Vital contributions were made across the artistic landscape, east and west.

If special credit is due to any particular group it should be accorded to an obscure tribe from the Eurasian steppes who literally galloped in, seemingly from out-of-nowhere: the Kushans. 

On view in the last gallery of Tree & Serpent is an unusual Buddha, physically imposing, with the commanding presence of a warrior rather than a mystic or a sage. Buddha Granting Protection dates to the early second century when the  Kushans, who commissioned this statue, were doing the same thing, protecting the people they had conquered, Against all expectations, Kushan rule brought political security, economic growth and religious freedom to Afghanistan and northern India, two of the most embattled regions of the world.



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
 Buddha Granting Protection, Kushan dynasty, early 2nd century 

The Kushans were originally part of a confederation of Indo-European nomads, wandering with their herds on China's western frontier. Early in the first century, the Kushans were pushed-out by more numerous tribes into the arid Bactrian Desert. Formidable horsemen, the Kushans launched a hard-hitting campaign, overwhelming the vulnerable Greek kingdoms in Afghanistan and then seizing a small, but strategic, slice of northern India.

At that point, the Kushans could have indulged in an orgy of massacres and scorched earth, similar to what the Huns and Mongols would later unleash. Instead, the Kushans showed enormous respect for the Greek and Indian populations now under their hegemony. The Kushans used their control of the Khyber Pass to encourage trade and travel, enriching themselves and their neighbors, including China, in the process.

The greatest of the Kushan kings, Kanishka I, who reigned from 127-150, added to these tremendous achievements by embracing Buddhism and encouraging Buddhist art. He placed a portrait of the Buddha on the reverse side of his gold coinage, the Buddha standing in a pose similar to that of Buddha Granting Protection, on view at the Met.



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
 Buddha Granting Protection, from Mathura,
 Kushan dynasty, early 2nd century 

As befitted a ruler of vast domains, Kanishka maintained two capital cities. Peshawar was located near the Khyber Pass in the heart of the Gandhara region. The second was Mathura, a major Buddhist center in the Indian province  which the Kushans ruled. Flourishing schools of art were maintained in both cities, each with a distinctive style of art. 



 Crowned Bodhisattva, from Mathura,
 late Kushan dynasty, 3rd–early 4th century 
Metropolitan Museum of Art photo 

Art in the Gandhara region under the Kushans maintained the stylistic elements of the Greco/Roman art we have been examining in this essay. Artists of the Mathura school, however, developed conventions of portraying the Buddha and saintly Buddhist figures, the Bodhisattvas, that were more in keeping with the earliest expressions of Buddhist art from southern India.

The Mathura school of art would ultimately be the more successful, influencing Buddhist art throughout Asia. But we should not think in terms of "winners and losers" when we reflect on the differences in style between Gandharan portraits of the Buddha and those of the Mathuran artists. Kushan rulers like Kanishka permitted freedom of expression, indeed encouraged it, and the artists of both schools responded by searching their hearts and souls to create portraits of the Buddha, images of sanctity and devotion, which people of all faiths can appreciate.



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
 Gallery view of Tree & Serpent, showing a Buddha, 3rd century, and a Temple step ("moonstone") from Sri Lanka, ca. 8th century

In his reflection on Civilization, Kenneth Clark called the Arena Chapel in Padua, Italy, the site of Giotto's fresco paintings, "one of the world's holy places." Without exaggeration, I think that the Met's Gallery 999, where Tree & Serpent is currently displayed, is such a sacred place, as well.

 ***

Text: Copyright of Ed Voves, all rights reserved                                                  Original photography, copyright of Anne Lloyd, all rights reserved

Introductory Image: Anne Lloyd, Photo (2023) Buddha (detail), Alluru, Andhra Pradesh, 3rd century. Limestone: H. 39 3/4 in. × W.13 in. × D. 6 1/4 in.(101 cm × 33 cm × 16.5 cm) National Museum, New Delhi

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2023) Gallery view of the Tree & Serpent: Early Buddhist Art in India, 200 BCE-400 CE exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2023) A view of the concluding gallery the Tree & Serpent exhibition, showing statues of the Buddha from the 2nd to 7th centuries. 

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2023) Statue of the Buddha, Nelakondapalli monastic region, 3rd century, lent by State Museum, Hyderbad, India; Temple step ("moonstone") from Sri Lanka, ca.8th century, lent from a private collection.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2023) Śrī Lakmī, Goddess of Abundance (excavated at Jamālpur mound), 2nd century. Sandstone: H. 41 in. × W. 12 in. × D. 11 in.(104.1 cm.× 30.5 cm.× 27.9 cm) National Museum, New Delhi

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Railing Pillar Medallion: Tree Shrine Marking the Buddha’s wakening, ca. 150 –100 BCE. Sandstone: 27 in.× 19 1/2 in. × 6 3/4 in. (68.6 cm × 49.5 cm × 17.1 cm) .Excavated at Bharhut, Madhya Pradesh, ca. 1873. Indian Museum, Kolkata (inv. 294)

Unknown Artist, Hellenistic Greek. A Statuette of a Rider Wearing an Elephant Hide Cloak, possibly Alexander the Great, 3rd century BCE. Bronze: 9 3/4 in. (24.8 cm) Metropolitan Museum of Art. #55.11.11

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Head of a Yaksha, from Mathura, 1st century BCE. Sandstone: H. 19 in. (48.2 cm); W. 15 3/4 in. (40 cm); D. 14 in. (35.6 cm) Lent by Cleveland Museum of Art.

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Head of  a Yaksha, from Sanchi Stupa, Madhya Pradesh, 1st century. Sandstone: H. 11 5/8 in. (29.5 cm); W. 6 1/8 in. (15.5 cm); D. 5 7/8 in. (15 cm) Lent by Staatliche Museen, Berlin.

Unknown Artist, Gandhara. Buddha, from the Takht-i-bahi Monastery, 3rd century. Schist: H 36 1/2 in. (92.7 cm); W. 11 in. (27.9 cm); D. 5 1/2 in. (14 cm) Metropolitan Museum, #2014.188

Unknown artist, Gandhara. Seated Buddha, 1st to mid-2nd century. Bronze with traces of gold leaf: H. 6 5/8 in. (16.8 cm); W. 4 1/2 in. (11.4 cm); D. 4 in. (10.2 cm) Metropolitan Museum, #2003.593.1

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Buddha Granting Protection, from Mathura, Kushan dynasty, early 2nd century. Sandstone: H. 16 3/4 in. (42.5 cm); W. 13 in. (33 cm); D. 6 1/2 in. (16.5 cm) Metropolitan Museum, lent from a private collection.

Unknown artist, Mathura, North India. Crowned Bodhisattva, late Kushan dynasty, 3rd–early 4th century. Sandstone: H. 16 3/4 in. (42.5 cm); W. 13 in. (33 cm); D. 6 1/2 in. (16.5 cm) Metropolitan Museum #2016.701

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)  Gallery view of the Tree & Serpent Exhibition, showing a Buddha statue, 3rd century, and a Temple step ("moonstone") from Sri Lanka, ca. 8th century. 


Wednesday, August 30, 2023

Art Eyewitness Review: Tree & Serpent: Early Buddhist Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

 

Tree & Serpent: Early Buddhist Art in India, 200 BCE-400 CE

Metropolitan Museum of Art 

July 21 - November 13, 2023

Reviewed by Ed Voves

Original Photography by Anne Lloyd

There is often a very thin line dividing an art museum gallery from a place of religious worship. One might almost describe it as an "open border" between the realm of the spirit and the secular world of scholarship and art appreciation.

On a number of occasions, I have felt something akin to a religious experience while visiting an art museum. This has occurred several times at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, notably in the spring of 2014 when I attended the press preview of Lost Kingdoms: Hindu-Buddhist Sculpture of Early Southeast Asia. I had such a powerful sense of being on "holy ground" that I forgot, for a brief moment or two, that I was at The Met.

When I saw the announcement that John Guy, the Met's internationally-renowned curator of Asian art who organized Lost Kingdoms, was working on a new exhibition, I was thrilled at the news. Perhaps anticipating more than was reasonable to expect, I wondered if I would have a similar epiphany.

At the July 17, 2023 preview of Tree & Serpent: Early Buddhist Art in India, 200 BCE-400 CEI received a "yes and no" answer. 



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
     Gallery view of Tree & Serpent, showing a Dharmachakra, ca. 200
                                        
Yes, Tree & Serpent matches Lost Kingdoms in the number of stunning works of art on view. Many of these have never been presented outside of India and several are recent discoveries from the ongoing effort to uncover India's ancient past.


Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
   Drum Panel with Veneration of Relics,        
from the Dupadu Great Stūpa, ca. 1st century

Yes, John Guy and the curatorial team of The Met have created a striking display setting for the exhibition, based on the dome-shaped Buddhist structure known as the stūpaAs noted in the excellent catalog of Tree & Serpent, the majority of "the works of art presented here once formed an integral part of the adornment of this pivotal Buddhist monument that emerged - lotus like - from the earthen funerary mound that was the stūpa's genesis." 



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
Gallery view of Tree & Serpent, showing a model of a stūpa built by the Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture, Cooper Union 

I had to pinch myself a couple of time to recall that this same gallery at The Met, only a few months ago, was the site for the equally astonishing exhibition, Lives of the Gods: Divinity in Maya Art. An entirely new realm, the world of Buddhism in its earliest years in southern India, is now on view in Gallery 999 at The Met.



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
Prayer service at the press preview of Tree & Serpent
conducted by monks from the New York Buddhist Vihara 

Also of note, The Met sponsored a prayer ceremony at the press preview, led by Buddhist monks from the New York Buddhist Vihara Foundation. These devout monks, who reside in a monastery in Queens, New York City, chanted sutras, the spoken words of the Buddha as recorded in Sri Lankan Buddhist tradition. It was a moving and unforgettable experience.



It was not an an epiphany, however. I did not have a moment of revelation or a deep personal sense of the sacred during my attendance at the press preview of Tree & Serpent. No offense intended to the great folks at The Met, especially the monks of the New York Buddhist Vihara!


Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
   Buddha Offering Protection, 5th century, (left) and
Buddha Granting Boons, 5th-6th century; both from Andhra Pradesh

One of the reasons why I did not experience a soul-stirring encounter with the Divine might have been due to the fact that the serene statues of the Buddha are grouped together in the final display area of Tree & Serpent, as shown above. By the time, I reached this impressive array of statuary, I was dealing with a case of sensory overload.

Images of the contemplative Buddha are what most non-specialist art lovers, like myself, associate with Buddhist art. However, many of the works on view in Tree & Serpent are narrative bas-reliefs, teeming with figures or drama. These were affixed to the pillars, railings and walls of the stūpa shrines, providing visual accounts of the life and teachings of the Buddha, much as stained glass windows in the Gothic Cathedrals of medieval Europe recounted the Gospel stories about Jesus.



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
   Drum Slab with Five Buddha Life Narratives (detail), 3rd century

Other statues on view depict deities only marginally related to the Buddha. These are nature spirits known as yakshas or yakshis or the goddess of abundance, Sri Lakshmi.



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
Gallery view of Tree & Serpent, showing a red sandstone statue 
of the Goddess of AbundanceSri Lakshmi, 2nd century  

And then there is one of my favorite works of art in the exhibition, shown below. It may not have promoted a moment of revelation, but Elephants Venerating the Ramagrama Stupa certainly brought a smile to my face.



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
   Pillar Abacus from Amaravati Great Stupa, showing
 Elephants Venerating the Ramagrama Stupa, 1st century

To be fair, museum exhibitions are not intended to create a spiritual state of mind or heart, though sometimes "spirit" does makes its presence felt. Instead, the task of curators is to reach back into time to present new insights about art, frequently with artifacts recently unearthed from archaeological sites, as is the case with Tree & Serpent. These are often unfamiliar to the general public, even unsettling on occasion. 



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
Gallery view of Tree & Serpent, showing a railing coping fragment with lotus bloom carving from the Barhut Great Stupa, 150-100 BCE

In such instances, it takes a considerable amount of effort to evaluate and  appreciate these ancient, yet newly discovered, works of art.

The past does not always give up its secrets easily. There are certainly a number of exhibition objects in Tree & Serpent which require intensive study to comprehend. Even then, with the guidance of brilliant scholars like John Guy, the meanings or significance of some of these may still be difficult to determine. 

By way of example, let us look at the railing cover or coping from the Great Stūpa at Madhya Pradesh. It was carved from sandstone, dating to 150 to 100 BCE, and shows two men scaling a mountain. 



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
   Railing Coping from Bharhut Great Stupa, showing
 Forest Dwellers Scaling or Quarrying a Rock Face (detail), 150-100 BCE

The two men are forest dwellers. They carry wicker baskets on their backs and are grasping pegs which have been inserted into a mountain side. Behind the pair and beneath their feet is a sacred plant, a wish-fulfilling lotus vine. 

Clearly, something of import is happening, but the exact meaning still eludes a definitive solution. Are the men scaling a mountain in search of treasure to bring back to deposit in honor of the Buddha in a stūpa? Or are they quarrying rock to construct a stūpa, durable stone being reserved for building sacred shrines?

This scene almost certainly illustrates a jataka tale, one of a vast corpus of stories and fables related to the Buddha. Many carved bas-relief narratives like this cannot be matched with texts of jataka tales. Other images brilliantly correspond to written jataka texts.



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
  Pillar Medallion from Bharhut Great Stupa, showing
 The Mugapakkha-jataka, 150-100 BCE

The Mugapakkha-jataka, depicted in the railing pillar medallion shown above, tells the story of a prince (the Buddha in disguise) who takes a vow of silence, due to his previous life transgressions. The prince's father, fearing disaster, orders the prince to be slain. But the royal chariot driver recognizes the prince as the future Buddha and spares his life. The prince's parents come to realize his divinity too and venerate him. 

This jataka scene, which dates to the same period as the mysterious tableau of the forest dwellers, is a masterpiece of story-telling, concise, coherent and beautifully carved. If it requires a bit of effort to comprehend, this version of the Mugapakkha-jataka is a tremendously appealing work of art and a treasure of spiritual awareness

The religious art of one culture often includes imagery which people of a different faith experience may find difficult to accept. Western people, raised in the Judeo-Christian tradition, and Buddhists view snakes from very different perspectives. The snake, seen as a treacherous deceiver in the Holy Bible's Book of Genesis, is viewed much more positively in Buddhism.

When we see the multi-headed cobra rearing-up on the carved railing pillar (below), we are witnessing a caring, nurturing deed rather than a dangerous reptile about to strike. The hooded-head of the snake acts like an umbrella shielding the Buddha from a dangerous storm.



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
   Railing Pillar with Naga Mucalinda protecting the Buddha
 (detail), 2nd-1st century, BC 

The protective cobra is known as the Naga Mucalinda. In these scenes, the Buddha often is not physically present, but is represented by a pair of footprints or by an empty throne, as shown above, encircled by the coils of the snake's body.

This Naga Mucalnda scene is one of the most ancient works of Buddhist art on view in Tree and Serpent. The early date is significant. So is the geographic locale of its creation: southern India, in the region known as the Deccan.

What we see on the walls and display cases of the Met's Gallery 999 is nothing less than the visual representation of the birth of Buddhism. In many of the works on view, we glimpse elements of earlier nature-based religious cults, including the worship of snake deities, which were incorporated into Buddhism as it developed in the Deccan, remote from cultural contact with outside civilizations. 




Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
Gallery views of Tree & Serpent. The bottom photo shows Torana architraves, a lion in front, with an elephant behind, 3rd-4th century 

Later, as the exhibition shows, there was significant mercantile contact with the Roman Empire. But Tree & Serpent is essentially an epic exhibit about India. The generous participation of the Indian government and Indian museums in organizing Tree & Serpent deserves the highest praise and appreciation. 

Tree & Serpent is also the story of the birth or rebirth of art in India, since very few works of art survived the long centuries before the rise of Buddhism. As the devout disciples of the Buddha built stūpa shrines across vast stretches of the Deccan, they encircled these sacred buildings with carved depictions of the Buddha's life which have endured the test of time and - some of them - now hang on the walls of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.



Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023)
   Drum Panel with Stupa Veneration and Seminal Buddh-life events        
from the Dupadu Great Stūpa, ca. 1st century

I intend to follow this review with a second essay focusing on the statues of the Buddha in the exhibition's concluding display. But for now, I want to reflect and meditate on all the wonderful treasures of art and spirituality I saw in Tree & Serpent. 

I have the feeling that I may experience an epiphany, after all. 

***

Text copyright of Ed Voves, all rights reserved.

Images copyright of Anne Lloyd, all rights reserved.

Introductory Image: Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Railing Pillar with Naga Mucalinda Pillar Protecting the Buddhapada (detail), ca. 150-100 BCE. Sandstone: H. 64 15/16 in. (165 cm), W. 12 5/8 in. (32 cm), D. 15 3/4 in. (23 cm) Lent by Allahabad Museum, Prayagraj, Uttar Pradesh

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Gallery view of the Tree & Serpent exhibition, with Dharmachakra, ca. 200. copper-alloy:  H. 12 3/4 in. (32.4 cm.) W. 7 3/4 in. (19.7 cm.) Diam. 8 in. (20.3 cm). Lent by Bihar Museum, Patna, India

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Drum Panel with Veneration of Relics, ca. 1st century. Limestone: H. 67 5/16 in. (171 cm). W. 40 5/16 in. (104 cm). D. 6 11/16 in. (17 cm). Lent by Amaravati Heritage Center and Museum, Andhra  Pradesh.

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Gallery view of Tree & Serpentshowing a model of a stūpa built by the Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture, Cooper Union

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Prayer ceremony at the press preview of Tree & Serpent, conducted by the monks from New York Buddhist Vihara Foundation.

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Buddha Offering Protection, 5th century, (left) Copper alloy: H. 16 in. (40.6 cm) W. 5 ¼ in. (13.3 cm) d. 4 ½ in. (11.4 cm) Metropolitan Museum collection; and Buddha Granting Boons, 5th-6th century. Copper alloy: H. 12 1/2 in. (41.7 cm) W. 3 15/16 in. (10 cm) d. 3 1/8 in. (8 cm) British Museum collection.

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Drum slab with Five Buddha-life Narratives (detail), 3rd century. Limestone: H. 78 3/8 in. (199 cm). W. 39 3/8 in. (100 cm). D. 8 1/4 in. (21 cm). Lent by Archaeological Museum, ASI, Nagarjunakonda, Andra Pradesh.

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Gallery view of Tree and Serpent, showing showing a red sandstone statue of the Goddess of AbundanceSri Lakshmi, 2nd century.  Lent by the National Museum, New Delhi.

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Elephants Venerating the Ramagrama Stupalate 1st  century. Limestone: H. 12 13/16 in. (32.5 cm) W. 25 3/4 in. (68 cm) d. 16 9/16 in. (42 cm) British Museum collection.

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Gallery view of Tree and Serpent, showing a railing coping fragment with lotus bloom carving from the Barhut Great Stupa, 150-100 BCE.  

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Railing Coping from Bharhut Great Stupa, showing Forest Dwellers Scaling or Quarrying a Rock Face (detail), 150-100 BCE. Sandstone: H. 13 3/4 in. (35 cm), W. 61 13/16 in. (157 cm), D. 10 1/4 in. (26 cm) Lent by National Museum, New Delhi.

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Railing Pillar Medallion with Mugapakkha-jataka, c. 150-100 BCE. Sandstone: H. 24 13/16 in. (63 cm). W. 22 1/16 in. (56 cm). D. 6 5/16 in. (16 cm). Lent by India Museum, Kolkata.

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Railing Pillar with Naga Mucalinda, 2nd-1st century, BC. Sandstone: : H. 43 5/16 in. (110 cm). W. 21 5/8 in. (55 cm). D. 19 1/2 in. (53 cm). Lent by National Museum, Delhi.

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Gallery views of Tree and Serpent. The bottom photo shows Torana Architraves, a lion in front, with an elephant behind, 3rd-4th century.  Lent by Department of Heritage, Telangana.

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2023) Drum Panel with Stupa Veneration and Seminal Buddha-life events, 1st century. Limestone: H. 64 9/16 in. (164 cm). W. 45 ¼ in. (115 cm). D. 6 in. (22 cm). Lent by Amaravati Heritage Center & Museum, Andhra Pradesh.