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Religious Change and Colonial Rule By: Shalaka and Dun McDunarrun
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India Viewers usually kept Indian paintings as books or albums. Indian paintings after the thirteenth century are divided into several schools, including Mughal and Rajput. The Hindu kings and their courts in Rajasthan and the Punjab Hills patronized Rajput painting. The Mughal emperors commissioned Mughal paintings.
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Bichitr, Jahangir Preferring a Sufi Shaikh to Kings The Mughal court, especially under Akbar, Jahangir, and Shah Jahan, lavishly patronized the arts. The artist BICHITR (active early seventeenth century to late 1650s) painted a portrait of Jahangir seated on an hourglass throne. Bichitr's picture states Jahangir's supremacy over time, the secular, and the sacred. The Mughal artists learned realistic techniques from Western models, available at the court in European books and engravings.
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Bhadrakali within the Rising Sun The bold areas of color, stylized figures, and flat picture plane of a work produced in Basohli, a Hindu court in the Punjab Hills, contrast markedly with the Mughal work's realism. The painting, accompanied by a poetic stanza, depicts Bhadrakali as the force activating the world matter. A comparison of Devi's positioning with Jahangir's placement in Bichitr's Mughal painting reveals a contrast between the Hindu court's deity-centered world and the deified but human emperor as world center.
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Great Temple, Maduri The Hindu Nayak rulers in south India during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries oversaw construction of some of the largest temple complexes in India. The builders expanded the temples outward by erecting ever-larger enclosure walls with monumental gopuras. Late temples also typically include numerous large mandapas and great water tanks. Such temples continue to sponsor many yearly festivals, attended by thousands of pilgrims, worshipers, merchants, and priests.
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Wat Mahathat, Sukhothai Wat Mahathat was the city's most important Buddhist monastery. The central monument, a stupa, although not a circular mound, housed a relic of the Buddha. A central lotus-bud tower and eight surrounding towers stand on the stupa's lower podium. Only a small portion of the brick structure's stucco decoration remains. The halls (vihan) in front do not survive, but the stone pillars still stand. Two monumental standing Buddha images flank the stupa, each enclosed in a brick building (mondop).
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Walking Buddha The Sukhothai Buddha images were the city's crowning artistic achievement. In the unique Sukhothai walking-Buddha statuary type the artists intended to express the Buddha's beauty and perfection. A flame leaps from the top of the head, and a sharp nose projects from the rounded face. A clinging robe reveals fluid rounded limbs. The handling of the bronze is well suited to the forms' elasticity.
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Schwedagon Pagoda Burma, like Thailand, is overwhelmingly a Theravada Buddhist country today. One of the largest stupas in the world is the Shwedagon Pagoda, which houses two of the Buddha's hairs. The great wealth encrusting the stupa was a gift to the Buddha from the Burmese laypeople to produce merit. The stupa is centered in an enormous complex of buildings, including wooden shrines filled with Buddha images.
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