Salabhanjika
A salabhanjika or shalabhanjika [1][2] is the sculpture of a woman, displaying stylized feminine features, standing near a tree and grasping a branch.[3] The name of these figures comes from the Sanskrit śālabhañjikā meaning 'breaking a branch of a sala tree'. They are also known as madanakai, madanika or shilabalika.
Artistic tradition
The shalabhanjika is a standard decorative element of Indian sculpture, a graceful stone sculpture representing a young female under a stylized tree in various poses, such as dancing, grooming herself or playing a musical instrument. The salabhanjika's female features, like breasts and hips, are often exaggerated. Frequently these sculpted figures display complex hairdos and an abundance of jewelry.
The shalabhanjika concept stems from ancient symbolism linking a chaste maiden with the sala tree or the asoka tree through the ritual called dohada, or the fertilisation of plants through contact with a young woman. The symbolism changed over the course of time and the shalabhanjika became figures used as ornamental carvings, usually located in the area where worshipers engage in circumambulation, near the garbhagriha of many Hindu temples.[4] Placed at an angle, salabhanjika figures also were used in temple architecture as a bracket figures.[5]
Salabhanjikas are also often mentioned in ancient and modern Indian literature.
Locations
Some of the most renowned salabhanjika sculptures are to be found in the 12th-century Hoysala temples of Belur, Halebidu and Somanathapura, in south-central Karnataka. The shalabhanjika on the East gateway (Torana), is the best known sculpture of the Sanchi Stupa near Bhopal, a World Heritage site, built from the 1st to the 12th centuries.[6] One of early examples are the shalabhanjikas of built in Shunga dynasty dating to the 2nd or 1st century BC, found at the Durakhi Devi Temple, after the excavation of Kumhrar, the remains of an ancient city of Pataliputra.[7]
Another less-known location famous for its outstanding salabhanjikas is a Chalukya period temple in Jalasangvi, Homnabad Taluk on the Gulbarga-Bidar state highway, at the northern end of Karnataka. Its well-endowed Madanika figures in seductive tribhanga poses are "...moon breasted, swan-waisted and elephant-hipped", according to the Indian artistic canons. These older feminine sculptures were the source of inspiration for the later Hoysala bracket-figures.[8]
Related iconography
The sal tree (Shorea robusta) is often confused with the ashoka tree (Saraca indica) in the ancient literature of the Indian Subcontinent.[9] The position of the Salabhanjika is also related to the position of Queen Māyā of Sakya when she gave birth to Gautama Buddha under an asoka tree in a garden in Lumbini, while grasping its branch.[10]
Some authors hold that Salabhanjika, as young girl at the foot of a tree, is based on an ancient tree deity related to fertility.[11]
See also
- Ashoka tree
- Caryatid, a similar element in Western architecture
- List of tree deities
- Yakshini
Notes
- ^ "Sandstone figure of Shalabhanjika Yakshi, stupa 1 at Sanchi, Central India, 1st century AD". British Museum. Retrieved May 11, 2013.
- ^ "Temple Strut with a Tree Goddess (Shalabhanjika)". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved May 11, 2013.
- ^ "salabhanjika". Asia Society Reference. Retrieved 2007-02-23.
- ^ "Salabhanjika". pallakrisnan.com. Retrieved 2007-02-23.
- ^ "Hoysala heritage". Frontline. Retrieved 2007-02-23.
- ^ "Harmony set in stone". Frontline. Volume 24 - Issue 18 :: Sep. 08-21, 2007. Retrieved May 11, 2013.
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(help) - ^ An overview of archaeological importance of Bihar Directorate of Archaeology, Govt. of Bihar."Shalabhanjika (the breaker of branches),"
- ^ India Travelogue - Jalasangvi
- ^ Eckard Schleberger, Die indische Götterwelt. Gestalt, Ausdruck und Sinnbild Eugen Diederich Verlag. Cologne. ISBN 3-424-00898-2, ISBN 978-3-424-00898-2
- ^ Buddhistische Bilderwelt: Hans Wolfgang Schumann, Ein ikonographisches Handbuch des Mahayana- und Tantrayana-Buddhismus. Eugen Diederichs Verlag. Cologne. ISBN 3-424-00897-4, ISBN 978-3-424-00897-5
- ^ Heinrich Zimmer, Myths and Symbols in Indian Art and Civilization. (1946)