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Feminist, Feminine And Everything In Between At Bihar Museum's Exhibition 'Women and Deities'

Bihar Museum바카라s exhibition, Women and Deities, is a timely feminist intervention to ways of seeing the Hindu religion at a time when India is sinking in revanchism

Feminist, Feminine And Everything In Between At Bihar Museum's Exhibition 'Women and Deities'
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On one of the walls of the museum stands a woman바카라s bust with a straight gaze that appears to confront many things바카라rhetoric, unfreedoms, male hegemony, and a narrow view of textbook history that is being rewritten to suit political agendas. This could be the female gaze that casts itself on other female figures in the big hall. The futuristic gaze in the gold-emblazoned bust by Ravinder Reddy emphasises everyday Indian women exuding casual sexuality and encompassing the feminine. This is no sideward glance. It is almost a challenge to the ways of seeing, a reminder almost to see women as subjects and not objects. At this exhibition titled Women and Deities바카라on display at Bihar Museum in Pat­na for its 2022 Foundation Day celebrations (it runs through September)바카라you see more than just relics from the past, or just breasts and butts. You see the feminine and feminist pri­­nci­ples fuse in resis­t­ance against the hysteria in the name of religion. It바카라s a timely offering of perspecti­ve and hope.

You see a feminist future emerging from the feminine aesthe­tics of the past, powerful enough to break the glass over what could easily be characterised as feminine, a cultural definition rather than a political one. But all personal is political, whet­her intended or not. Culture and politics don바카라t operate in isolation.

The exhibition of 156 artworks, including 10 contemporary ones, spans a period of 2,000 years. They are culled from the museum바카라s own store. Anjani Kumar Singh, the museum바카라s dire­ctor-general, says it바카라s a tribute to women of India and Bihar.

The statue of the Didarganj Yakshi from the 3rd century BCE, found in Bihar, is testimony to the range of this exhibition, from the divine to the temporal. It traces the position of wom­en and their representation in different eras, in social and political contexts. Like the one of Indrani, the daughter of a demon king, who became a god바카라s consort.

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Ravinder Reddy바카라s Small Bronze Head Photo Courtesy: Bihar Museum

A 6th century statue in stone excavated from Saraikela in Jharkhand has the goddess holding a child. Also called Shachi, her sexuality defies all attempts at sanitising Hinduism, in which there is no concept of divine blasphemy. It is an orthoprax tradition, not an orthodox one. The pantheon is evidence of that, and in some sense, at loggerheads with the extremely red­uctive definition of the religion itself.

Section 295 of the Indian Penal Code criminalises insult to religion, allowing up to three years imprisonment and fines for 바카라whoever, with deliberate and malicious intention of outraging the religious feelings of any class of citizens of India, by words, either spoken or written, or by signs or by visible representations or otherwise, insults or attempts to insult the religion or the religious beliefs of a class.바카라

In 1996, Bajrang Dal activists attacked a gallery in Ahmeda­bad for displaying works of Maqbool Fida Husain, on the grou­nds that they offended Hindus. He had earlier faced court battles, death threats and abuse, after a little-known Hindi monthly from Madhya Pradesh, Vichar Mimansa, accused him of hurting Hindu sensibilities by painting Goddess Saraswati in the nude in 1976. Husain was eventually hou­n­ded out of India.

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Day and Night Oil on canvas by Arpana Caur

바카라Her upper garment was the globules of foam and her glorious breasts the sporting rahanga birds. Her romavali, effective in distracting the minds of learned men, was the network of algae. Her beautiful ringlets of braided hair were the rows of  bees, and her lengthy eyes, the petals of the blossomed lotus. Her navel, dispelling the heat of those with fever, was the whirlpool churned by the wind바카라 her buttocks were wide, glistening sand banks.바카라

바카라Sridhara, comparing the River Yamuna to a courtesan. From The Pasanahacariu of Sridhara: The First Four Sandhis of the Apabhramsa Text. Quoted by Alka Pande in The Eternal Feminine for Bihar Museum바카라s Women and Deities exhibition curated by her.

But that painting is innocuous compared to the Indian pant­h­eon that is full of unclothed deities, like the stone statue of Lajja Gauri from the 6th century that was found in Kosambi in Uttar Pradesh and is on display.

바카라There was no fear. This is our history. This is our claim to it,바카라 Singh says. For curator Alka Pande, the exhibition represents바카라along with beauty and grace바카라the power of women.

While the representations of women and deities aren바카라t biased, its viewership could be바카라moulded as it is by the colonial strategy of casting gender within hierarchies and binaries. But that can be sidestepped, ignored and dismissed. It is feminine and feminist. It challenges and resists.

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Temporal (left) Dancing Girl from Mohenjo-daro; and (right) Untitled by Anjolie Ela Menon

The exhibition places a statue of a dancing girl among a horde of goddesses from the pantheon that includes pagan godde­s­ses like Mansa Devi, representing a ran­ge of polytheism among the masses. And although some have argued that this was organised in a monistic way, there is a sta­rk difference in the way Abrah­a­mic religions look at monotheism. Some mig­ht even say they all represent the one god in Hinduism.

Whether the goddesses represent one or many, the exhibition is evidence of empowerment of expression in history, and while many have attribu­ted the feminine principle to such representation, in the laterite statue on display at the exhibition, of the twelve-armed Buddhist female deity Chunda from the 8th century AD, excavated in Odisha바카라s Cuttack, you see a serpent, a book and a noose, among other objects.

Then there is Hariti, a Buddhist goddess in bronze who was an ogress and devou­red children, but became a protector of children after converting to Buddhism. The goddess is not the 바카라other바카라 as Pande notes, becoming an 바카라inseparable entity in the cosmological order of being structured through a fantasy바카라.

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Divine (left) The Didarganj Yakshi; and Lajja Gauri from Kosambi

The Dancing Girl from Mohenjo-daro with the decorative headgear in terracotta, from around 2nd century BCE, found in Bihar바카라s Buxar, is there too, sharing space with the deities. The exhibition is thus an antidote to 바카라othering바카라, and also to the gender inequality that continues to plague societies, particularly in India.

Museums are repositories of history and can resurrect the suppressed history in today바카라s world of hate-filled rhe­toric. They are physical manife­sta­tions of history, and encounters with such a range of artworks representing women and deities바카라where there isn바카라t an attempt to make women aspire to become goddess-like that many feminists argue is equating upper-caste Hindu symbolism with femininity바카라bring up questions of marginalisation and representation.

Here, in the nude figurines of godde­s­ses, there is no such thing as 바카라honour바카라. In a country of many regressive practi­ces바카라from female foeticide and a growing obsession with 바카라love jihad바카라, to hon­­our kil­lings that strip women of their age­ncy바카라the exhibition is a tim­ely remin­der, where evidential history collides with contemporary reality. 

(This appeared in the print edition as "The Zeitgeist")

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