Mauryan
Sculpture
The
Maurya period is marked by an impressive progress in the Indian sculpture. Dr.
Ananda Coomarswamy differentiates the Mauryan sculptures into Court art and
the Popular Art. The Court art includes the
pillars and their capitals while the popular art includes the works of
sculptors such as the Yakshas and Yakshinis. The
Yaksha image from Parkam and Yakshini Image from Besnagar are examples of
popular art.
Influence of
Religions on Maurya Sculptures
In
those times, the religious practices had many dimensions and were not confined
to just one particular mode of worship. At the same time, the Buddhism
became the most popular social and religious movement during Maurya era.
Yaksha worship
was very popular before and after the advent of Buddhism and it was well
assimilated in Buddhism and Jainism. Thus, the concept of religious
sculpture was predominant during the Mauryan Empire.
Influence of
Foreign Countries on Maurya Sculpture
It
is a well-known fact that the first three Mauryan emperors, Chandragupta,
Bindusɑra
and Aśoka, maintained friendly relations with
the Hellenic West, particularly with the court of the great Seleucid kings who
may be described as successors of Alexander, the Great and of the Achaemenids
of Iran as well.
This
may indicate the source of extraneous influences, and an adaptation of
Achaemenids models has been recognised in the Edicts of Aśoka and in the
remains of the Mauryan palace in the imperial city of Pɑtaliputra.
But the Mauryan pillars are different from the
Achaemenid pillars. The Mauryan pillars are rock-cut pillars thus displaying
the carver’s skills, whereas the Achaemenid pillars are constructed in pieces
by a mason.
Maurya Court
Art
The
surface of both the shaft and the capital was chiselled with extraordinary
precision and accuracy. The bell was decorated with highly stylized
longitudinal lotus-petals with sharp and thin ridges in the middle and wide and
roundish border moldings.
Stone
pillars were erected all over the Mauryan Empire with inscriptions engraved on
them. The top portion of the pillar was carved with capital figures such as
bull, the lion, the elephant, etc. Every capital figure stands on a square or
circular abacus. The abacuses have been decorated by stylized lotuses.
The
important places where the pillars have been found are Basarah-Bakhira,
Lauriya- Nandangarh, Rampurva, Sankisa and Sarnath.
These
pillars were carved in two types of stone viz.
·
Spotted red and white sandstone from
the region of Mathura.
·
Buff-coloured fine grained hard
sandstone usually with small black spots quarried in the Chunar near Varanasi.
The
uniformity of style in the pillar capitals suggests that they were all sculpted
by craftsmen from the same region. They were inscribed with edicts of Ashoka on
Dhamma or righteousness. The animal capital as a finely carved life like
representation. Noteworthy are the lion capital of Sarnath, the bull capital
of Rampurva and the lion capital of Laurya Nandangarh.
Lion
Capital at Sarnath
·
The Mauryan pillar capital found at
Sarnath popularly known as the Lion Capital, which is now our national symbol,
is considered to be the finest example of Mauryan sculptural tradition.
·
The capital originally consisted of
five component parts:
·
The shaft, which is broken in many
parts now
1.
A lotus bell base
2.
A drum on the bell base with four
animals proceeding clockwise
3.
The figures of four majestic lions
4.
The crowning element, Dhammachakra, a
large wheel, was also a part of this pillar. However, this wheel is lying in a
broken condition and is displayed in the site museum at Sarnath. Chakras were
also made on the circular drum under the feet of the lions.
5.
The capital without the crowning wheel
and the lotus base has been adopted as the National Emblem of Independent
India.
The
four voluminous roaring lion figures firmly stand on a circular abacus which is
carved with the figures of four animals – a striding elephant, a
galloping horse, a walking bull and a prancing lion. Four lions placed
back-to-back face the cardinal directions, indicating the spread of
dharma. These are formal and stylised and are reminiscent of the
Persian tradition.
The
four lions on the Sarnath pillar originally supported a large chakra, or wheel.
The chakra is an important symbol of cosmic order in Upanishadic thought. In
Buddhism, it represents the Dhammachakrapravartana (the first
sermon by the Buddha), which has become a standard symbol of this great
historical event in the life of the Buddha.
Four
other animals were also shown proceeding clockwise around the drum, suggesting
the movement of the wheel of dharma. Unlike the lions above, these animals are
made in a highly naturalistic manner.
The
precision with which this capital has been carved shows that the Mauryan
sculptors had considerable mastery in the sculptural techniques.
Pillar
at Vaishali
·
Different from the earlier Ashokan
pillars because it has only one lion capital. Location of this
pillar is contiguous to the site where a Buddhist monastery and a sacred
coronation tank stood. The lion faces north, the direction Buddha took on his
last voyage.
Asoka
Pillar at Allahabad
In
Allahabad there is a pillar with inscriptions from Ashoka and later
inscriptions attributed to Samudragupta and Jehangir. The pillar is located
inside the Allahabad Fort. It is assumed that the pillar was first erected at
Kaushambi an ancient town some 30 kilometres west of Allahabad that was the
capital of the Koshala kingdom. The Ashokan inscription is in Brahmi and is
dated around 232 BC.
Pillars
at Lauriya-Areraj and Lauriya-Nandangarh
The
column at Lauriya-Nandangarh, 23 km from Bettiah in West Champaran district,
Bihar has single lion capital. The hump and the hind legs of the lion project
beyond the abacus. The pillar at Lauriya-Areraj in East Champaran district,
Bihar is devoid of any capital.
Critical
evaluation of Maurya Court Art
The
most important function of the Mauryan pillars was to impress and over-awe the
populace with the power and majesty of its rulers. This is evident from the
compactness of the solid animal figures, their exaggerated forms and their
conventional appearances, also the most imposing stateliness of the columns.
But this renders Mauryan court-art to be individualistic in its essential
character and ideology. It lacked deeper roots in the collective social will,
taste and preference and was, therefore, destined to have an isolated and short
life, coeval and coexistent with and within the limits of the powerful Mauryan
court. That is the reason that Mauryan court-art, with all its dignified
bearing, monumental appearance and civilized quality, forms but a short and
isolated chapter of the history of Indian art.
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