The Young Heroine Feeding a Deer

$235
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The young lady-in-waiting has decided to spend her free time, when the queen is in her peaceful sleep, by sneaking out from the kingdom and adoring the beauty of flora and fauna amidst the lush green forest. She has successfully found a quiet and empty place, having just the beautiful deers playing and the large trees forming a backdrop to this painted beauty. She can’t resist admiring the sparkling eyes and the innocent face of the deer. She makes it rest on her lap and pleases by feeding it with leaves. The blossoming colourful flowers on the ground add to the charm and serenity of the environment.


Long, winged eyes framed by the sleek arched eyebrows, pointed nose and the gentle curve of her pink lips define the innate beauty and delicacy of the lady. The deep yellow floral lehenga contrasts stunningly with the deep orange blouse and her slim waist is ornamented with the long pearl necklaces. The richness of her jewels and the royal tone of her garbs identifies her as being one of the main daasi of the queen. Her black curly wisps seem to be accessorized with the tiny motifs of flowers on her netted blue chunri.


Kailash Raj is one of the noted artists known for portraying contemporary styles with watercolour art, keeping intact the real essence of the painting. This effective time spent by the lady with the deer is beautifully painted; the bright colours used for the protagonist are gracefully highlighted in the peaceful verdant background.

This item can be backordered
Time required to recreate this artwork
6 to 8 weeks
Advance to be paid now
$47 (20%)
Balance to be paid once product is ready
$188
Item Code: HN22
Artist: Kailash Raj
Specifications:
Water Color Painting on PaperArtist:Kailash Raj
Dimensions 6 inch X 9 inch
Handmade
Handmade
Free delivery
Free delivery
Fully insured
Fully insured
100% Made in India
100% Made in India
Fair trade
Fair trade
This great masterpiece, rare in theme revealing most gentle aspect of human mind and as much accomplished in its style of rendering, represents a young maiden feeding a deer not so much with the piece of twig she is holding in her hand as with her caring heart and loving touch, and the animal too, is drawn to her not for what she has to feed it as to look into her eyes and span the depth of her love she has for it. Such is the intensity of feeling that the animal does not hesitate in riding over her and she too has given up herself to its will. Apart, she has allowed it to let its curving neck comfortably stay over her well swelled breasts close to her bosom and to let it explore her loving eyes to see in them if the love in them is for it or for someone in her mind, and it is being used as only the tool to express it. She has held and drawn the animal far closer than it could dream of.

Such affectionate ties between beautiful maidens and a deer have long defined the softest impulse that a human being : essentially a woman, is capable of having in heart. In the great Sanskrit classic Abhijnana Shakuntalam by Kalidasa, a baby-deer, not a human being, holds Shakuntala’s sari and expresses its disapproval of her leaving it and the hermitage. This soft impulse is reproduced in a first century BC relief panel carved at Rani-gumpha, Udaigiri Caves, Bhubaneswar, where a tiny deer is sculpted as holding a young maiden’s wear in its mouth. Though largely eroded with time, the intensity of affection on both ends might be easily read. In medieval sculptures and paintings, frescos and miniatures, this theme has been repeatedly represented. The painters seeking to visually illustrate Ragas – modes of producing music on Indian classical lines, have used this imagery : a young maiden caressing a deer or fawn, for illustrating a number of such Ragas.

The young maiden as portrayed in this Kishangarh painting, aesthetically the most brilliant and beautiful art-style in entire Rajasthani painting, portraying its females with doe-eyes like innocence in their fish-eyes, sharp pointed nose affording to the entire face a bit angular dimension and with a curved neck, has strange dimensional symmetry with the up-raised face of the animal. Outstanding in great aesthetic beauty, elegantly modeled tall slender figures with sharp features and emotionally charged eyes and faces, long, dark black unbound long hair with a rippling lock falling down the cheek around the ear, a well defined chin, broad forehead, curved neck and moderately modeled breasts, besides a sensitively treated background usually the lush green nature, and sometimes a marble palace, temple, or building laid around, the Kishangarh art style has the flavour as also the type of imagery best suited to such rare aesthetic theme as portrayed in this painting. Perhaps it would not reveal so powerfully in other styles of painting. The artist, a contemporary one who had before him all art models, chose Kishangarh art form obviously for its great power to reveal such theme.

The young damsel has been portrayed with a dense column of lush green trees in the background and a green stretch of land with flowering shrubs scattered over, in the fore-ground and around. For facilitating the animal she has turned her left leg backwards, and the right, upwards, perhaps for supporting it. Her figure has been conceived with tall slim fish like eyes, arching eyebrows, thick long dark hair with a thin lock curling down the cheek, sharp pointed nose, small thin delicate lips, a well defined chin, mildly curved neck and slim slender figure exactly as is the iconography and anatomy of the female figures in the mid-eighteenth century Kishangarh miniatures especially those rendered by Nihal Chand, the painter who in the form of Bani-thani had created the timeless model of feminine beauty. Her ensemble : ‘choli’ – a breasts-wear, ‘odhani’ – the sash like upper wear, and ‘lehenga’ – flared long skirt, printed in typical Rajasthani motifs and character, reveals land’s flavour.

This description by Prof. P.C. Jain and Dr Daljeet. Prof. Jain specializes on the aesthetics of ancient Indian literature. Dr Daljeet is the chief curator of the Visual Arts Gallery at the National Museum of India, New Delhi. They have both collaborated on numerous books on Indian art and culture.

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