21 January – 15 August 2016
Detail of the ‘Vrindavani Vastra’, a woven silk textile. From Assam, India,
late 17th century.
Discover a little-known chapter of Indian history through the largest
surviving example of an Assamese devotional textile, the ‘Vrindavani Vastra’.
The Vrindavani Vastra (literally ‘the cloth of Vrindavan’) was produced in
Assam in north-eastern India sometime in the late 17th century. It is made of
woven silk and figured with scenes from the life of the Hindu god Krishna
during the time he lived in the forest of Vrindavan. It was made to be used in
the Krishna cult which developed following the ministry of the Assamese saint
Shankaradeva (d. 1568).
At over 9 metres long, this Assamese textile is
the largest of its type to survive. It is made up of 12 strips, all now sewn
together. The Krishna scenes on the textile are from the 10th-century text the Bhagavata
Purana, and are elaborated in the dramas of Shankaradeva. A verse from one
of these is also woven into the textile, using immensely sophisticated weaving
technology, now extinct in India. Following its use in Assam the textile had a
second history in Tibet. It was found there by Perceval Landon during the
Younghusband Expedition sent from British India to Lhasa in 1903–1904. Landon,
a friend of Rudyard Kipling, was the correspondent from The Times on
the expedition, and he gave the textile to the British Museum in 1905.
Dance mask of the crane-demon Bakasura. Made in the workshop of Hem Chandra
Goswami, Chamaguri monastery, Majuli island, Assam, India, 2015.
In the exhibition, the Vrindavani Vastra will be displayed alongside other
Assamese objects from the British Museum and several important loans, including
another magnificent example of one of these Krishna textiles on loan from
Chepstow Museum. This survives as the lining of a remarkable item of
18th-century Anglo-Indian costume. Manuscript leaves from the British Library,
masks (the making and acquisition of which have been funded by the Luigi and
Laura Dallapiccola Foundation) and modern textiles will help reveal this
intriguing period in Indian history.
The display will also feature two film elements – an introductory film
about Assam and contemporary devotion to Krishna filmed at the 2014 Ras lila
festival on Majuli island, and a new video artwork made for the exhibition by
the Guwahati-based group the Desire Machine Collective. This new artwork is
generously funded by the Gujral Foundation.
http://www.britishmuseum.org/whats_on/exhibitions/Krishna_in_the_garden_of_Assam.aspx
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