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Women offering worship at the Ganges during a lunar eclipse
Image source: collections.vam.ac.uk

Women offering worship at the Ganges during a lunar eclipse

Artist:Mukul Dey
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Support Type: Canvas
Paint Type: Gouache
Current Location: Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Mukul Dey is well known for his paintings concentrating on the Indian aesthetics of the 20th century with essence of the techniques of Western art forms. This artwork vividly depicts the Hindu traditions of "Tarpan" and other related pious rituals. Inheriting the Bengal School ethics of delicate wash techniques popularised by Abanindranath Tagore, Mukul Dey illustrated the Indian theme by painting three women figures offering worship during the lunar eclipse(chandra grahan). In Hindu traditions, this lunar eclipse period is considered extremely sacred and spiritually powerful and hence marks a time for honouring ancestors. In this painting, an elderly woman is seated at the front, another woman is amidst water and the third woman stands in a vibrant saree accompanying them. They are totally focused in the sacred activity, they are draped in sarees and they also carry reddish clay pots(known in Bengali as kolshi) probably to collect water or bath during the ritual. The dark, dimly lit and silhouetted leaves in the background highlight their figures in this artwork. This painting is important in order to the Hindu traditions that we're practised in the contemporary times and is also instrument is studying the various roles of the "modern" Bengali woman i.e the "bhadromohila" which was a colonial construct. The women figures seem devoted and concentrated in traditional and spiritual way of life.

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Location source: collections.vam.ac.uk
Information Compiled by Adrita Dutta
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