Radha Krishna with Attendants

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Details

Size: 11.25 x 9.25 inches (framed)
Medium: Natural Colours on Paper
Condition: Time Related Tears
Style: Jaipur School of Painting

Description

This is a beautiful Jaipur School painting of Krishna and Radha with attendants. They sit on a gold throne in a garden, with a stylized lotus under their feet. To either side stand attendants with flywhisks, and above them is a gold parasol or Chatra. In Buddhism and Hinduism, the chatra is an auspicious symbol, representing royalty and protection. Krishna is the god of compassion, tenderness, and love; and is one of the most popular and widely revered among Indian divinities. Radha is Krishna’s most prominent wife, and her selfless love for Krishna is considered a model to devotees. This painting measures 6.25 x 5 inches. With the frame, it measures 11.25 x 9.25 inches. There are tears on the top left corner, top border and the bottom left of the painting.

About the Jaipur School of Painting
It is generally believed that the Jaipur School of Painting (sometimes called the Amber School) began in the State of Amber, which had the closest relations with the Mughal Emperors. Amber was the capital until Sawai Jai Singh (1699–1743), an influential ruler, who established a new capital city Jaipur in 1727, and shifted from Amber (hence the two names of the school). Jaipur School of paintings thrived under his reign and emerged as a well-defined independent school. The Jaipur School, largely due to Jaipur’s friendly alliances with the Mughals, remained rooted in the Mughal style, though the artists pushed the boundaries to include
tales from Hindu epics and the escapades of Lord Krishna. It was only in the eighteenth century, under the aspiration of Sawai Pratap Singh (1779–1803) that the predominant Mughal influence receded and a Jaipur style with reformulated aesthetics, which was a blend of Mughal and indigenous stylistic features, emerged. The Jaipur School falls under the umbrella term of the Dhundar School of painting, which includes the Jaipur, Alwar and Ajmer Schools).

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