• NGMA India

    Jamini Roy

    Accession No . 3123 Artist Name. Jamini Roy Title. Govardhana Medium. Watercolour on paper Size. 30 x 14 cm

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    The Krishna Leela series of painting the artist attempted is of a different character. Jamini Roy represented beautifully the followers of Krishna or Vaishnavas either as making offerings to the lord or on the way to a temple in a procession or going around villages singing kirtans (devotional songs) on the life of Krishna, and seeking alms. It is interesting to see how Roy broke down the figure to the essential form that goes into its making and then synthesised it to suggest a structure. Jamini Roy drew imagery that was authentic using simplification of form inspired by the folk arts of the region that had evolved over the centuries. In this particular painting the artist portrays an evocative image of a rural community with the blue lord Krishna garlanded and has held mount Govardhan up as protection to his people and cattle from the rain. The village herdsmen have gathered around him to come under his protection and are holding fly whisks and playing on flutes in obeisance to the lord. The artist has instead of the sturdy, erect figures in his other works has stylised the figures with a bent in their axes or tribhanga from the traditional iconography. With stylised and suggestive tree forms, Jamini Roy created an idyllic pastoral scene, a rural utopia of his imagination.