In the realm of the senses divine. (Hindu and Buddhist arts)
(Between the Visible and the Invisible)
Romain Maitra
UNESCO Courier
Dec 1990
pp.28-29
            
COPYRIGHT UNESCO (France) 1990

            TRADITIONAL Indian art is primarily religious. Everything in it has
            a divine meaning and no aspect of life is treated for its own sake. 
            People, trees, flowers, birds and other features of the natural 
            world are all depicted in painting and sculpture, but their beauty 
            is not intrinsic, it lies in the divine idea which is impressed on 
            those human minds which are in a suitably receptive state. 
            The earliest Indian treatise on the theory of the beautiful is the 
            Natya Shastra, which was written around the sixth century BC. In it 
            the sage-priest Bharata set forth the important concept of aesthetic 
            flavour or rasa. In a famous passage, Bharata says that a rasa is a 
            strong and lasting emotion which may be kindled by transitory 
            feelings of pleasure and pain. He describes the main rasas which are 
            aroused by the arts as erotic, comic, pathetic, furious, heroic, 
            terrible, odious, and marvellous. 
            To taste rasa the spectator must be in that state of freedom which 
            comes from detachment from the self. His or her mind must be in a 
            pure and balanced state (sattric). Egoism and desire must be 
            forsaken before vision and delight are possible. Through glimpsing a 
            divine vision, the real nature of the soul is set free. Unlike the 
            katharsis of Greek tragedy, rasa does not involve the idea of 
            emotional relief alone. The spectator does not experience the 
            unpleasant or agreeable effects of his or her reactions but resolves 
            them into a blissful state of consciousness. 
            While the ultimate aesthetic consciousness is purely contemplative, 
            the steps prescribed to achieve it through the artistic process are 
            marked by a high degree of concentration and purity of mind. 
            Aesthetic activity is like a yoga, a seeking of truth, a spiritual 
            exercise involving the cultivation of a disinterested feeling. The 
            emotions aroused by a work of art do not belong to any one person, 
            neither to artist, actor or spectator. They have no location in time 
            and space. As Ananda Coomaraswamy has pointed out, "all knowledge 
            and all truth are absolute and infinite, waiting not to be created, 
            but to be found". 
            When depicting the gods, Indian sculptors and painters did not use 
            the Hellenic models whereby the gods are imagined in human form. 
            They sought to attain their goal through conceptual insight or 
            intuition rather than by observation and analysis of physical 
            features. A deity symbolically represents a unified set of spiritual 
            ideas and his body, therefore, should be regarded as merely a 
            vehicle for the eternal expression of that particular set of 
            spiritual ideas. Thus the many-headed gods and many-armed goddesses 
            of Hindu art represent eternal abstract ideas of beauty and have no 
            exact counterparts in nature. 
            One ideal of the divine form is based on the ancient notion of the 
            Indian hero, the superman. The Mahabharata describes this ideal form 
            as that of a mighty hunter who became invincible after vanquishing 
            the king of beasts in many conflicts and acquired a lion-like body 
            with broad chest and shoulders, long, massive arms, a thick neck, 
            and a very slim waist. In Indian art this leonine body became the 
            symbol of physical strength. Nimbleness, another essential quality 
            for success in the chase, was symbolized by legs like those of a 
            deer or a gazelle, a feature which is prominent in the Buddhist 
            cave-paintings at Ajanta in northern India and in the Buddhist 
            sculptures at Amaravati. 
            In both Hindu and Buddhist art, gods who had acquired divine powers 
            by ascetic practices are not represented like human ascetics with 
            bodies emaciated by hunger and thirst, with protruding bones and 
            swollen veins. Instead they are portrayed with smooth skin and 
            rounded limbs. Their veins and bones are always concealed, they have 
            strong necks, massive shoulders and narrow waists. Whereas the 
            divinities of the Far East appear to dwell in a fair garden of peace 
            filled with delicate springtime blossoms, the Indian ideal of beauty 
            seems to be set among the celestial solitudes of a Himalayan 
            skyscape hinting at the infinite. 
            A special feature of the Indian concept of the beautiful is based on 
            the distinction between pleasure and bliss (ananda), which is stated 
            in the Bhagavad Gita as being at the core of beauty. Pleasure is 
            selfish and individual, phenomenal and relative, whereas bliss is 
            absolute and infinite. Pleasure is transitory, but bliss is 
            unalloyed and related to composure and peace. The Ramayana and the 
            Mahabharata do not end with the vanquishing of the unrighteous and 
            the victory of the righteous. They move on towards the fulfilment of 
            a life after life. The goal is not the attainment of an earthly 
            throne but the attainment of perfection. Sensuality and spirituality 
            seem to be merely the inner and outer aspects of the same life. The 
            Ajanta paintings enchantingly depict a civilization in which the 
            conflict of matter and spirit hag been beautifully resolved.