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Krishna Approaches the Cowherds at Their Forest Encampment (painting, recto; text, verso), folio from a Bhagavata Purana series
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On the recto side of this folio is a painting that features the blue-skinned Hindu god Krishna approaching a group of cowherds at their encampment. On the verso side of this folio are verses from the tenth book of the Bhagavata Purana’s chapter fourteen, which describes the encounter between Brahma and Krishna. Brahma, in order to test Krishna, abducts his fellow cowherds and their cows, only to realize that Krishna was able to miraculously rescue them. The moment depicted in the folio corresponds to the text on the reverse: Krishna, having gone away for a whole year, appears to his cowherd friends as returning only a moment after he had disappeared. This folio most likely belonged to a Bhagavata Purana series produced in Guler. Another possible folio from the same series is 1974.109. Scholars have attributed this painting to the Pahari painter, Manaku of Guler (c. 1700 - 1760 CE). Rajput, Pahari, Guler School.
Text on Verso: Bhagavata Purana, Book Ten, Chapter 14, verses 42-45.
Department of Islamic & Later Indian Art
Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bienstock
Title: Krishna Approaches the Cowherds at Their Forest Encampment (painting, recto; text, verso), folio from a Bhagavata Purana series
Description:
On the recto side of this folio is a painting that features the blue-skinned Hindu god Krishna approaching a group of cowherds at their encampment.
On the verso side of this folio are verses from the tenth book of the Bhagavata Purana’s chapter fourteen, which describes the encounter between Brahma and Krishna.
Brahma, in order to test Krishna, abducts his fellow cowherds and their cows, only to realize that Krishna was able to miraculously rescue them.
The moment depicted in the folio corresponds to the text on the reverse: Krishna, having gone away for a whole year, appears to his cowherd friends as returning only a moment after he had disappeared.
This folio most likely belonged to a Bhagavata Purana series produced in Guler.
Another possible folio from the same series is 1974.
109.
Scholars have attributed this painting to the Pahari painter, Manaku of Guler (c.
1700 - 1760 CE).
Rajput, Pahari, Guler School.
Text on Verso: Bhagavata Purana, Book Ten, Chapter 14, verses 42-45.
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