Two media that reveal a lot about Nepalese
culture, both past and present, are painting and sculpture.
Fortunately, there are many fine and well-preserved pieces that
have survived the passage of time and thus enable detailed
research to be made. Looking briefly at the history of Nepalese
painting, it appears that ancient icons and religious paintings
entered the Valley during the Lichchhavi period. Lichchhavi
inscriptions inform us that traders, monks and Brahmans as well as
artists from neighbouring areas, visited Kathmandu Valley from the
mid-fifth century A.D. The visitors may have brought religious
icons and paintings with them which served as models for local
artists.
The Chinese envoy, Wang Hsuan Tse, Who came to Nepal in the
seventh Century A.D; described quite eloquently the houses in the
Valley, which at that early time were embellished with sculptures
and paintings. Although there are no surviving examples of
paintings from the Lichchhavi period, it can be surmised that the
murals or wall paintings noticed by the Chinese envoy were just as
sophisticated as the surviving pieces of culture from this period.
The earliest examples of Nepalese painting are in the form of
manuscript illustrations on palm leaves. Nepalese manuscripts go
back to the ninth century; however not all Early manuscripts were
illustrated. The earliest known example of an illustrated
manuscript is the Astasahasrika Pragyaparamita, dated A.D. 1015.
These manuscripts invariably consists of narrow folios of palm
leaves about thirty centimeters long, depending on the text, but
not wider than five centimeters. The manuscripts are perforated in
two places, loosely held together with string and protected by
wooden covers on both sides. These wooden covers, a large number
of which have survived are more lavishly painted than the
manuscripts themselves. In palm leaf manuscripts the scribes left
spaces for the artists to later paint in the figures of
divinities. After the introduction of paper, palm leaf became less
popular; however it continued to be used until the eighteenth
century. Early paper manuscripts imitated the oblong shape but
were wider than the palm leaves.
Influence of Religion on Painting :- All
surviving illustrated manuscripts, whether Buddhist or Hindu, are
illustrated with hieratic images of gods and goddesses. A large
number of manuscripts are devoted to the principal events from the
life of Buddha or the hieratic representations of Vajrayana
deities, which bear little relation to the tet. During the early
medieval period, Pragyaparamita, the personification of wisdom,
became one of the most popular deities in Nepal. Manuscripts
consecrated to this deity were repeatedly copied. Besides These
Buddhist manuscripts, illuminated manuscripts of Hindu divinities
such as Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva, Kartikeya and Ganesh were also
frequently represented. Manuscripts continued to be painted and
copied for centuries, for the act of donating a manuscript to a
monk, priest, monastery or temple was considered by both Hindus
and Buddhists to be an act of great virtue. Early illustrated
manuscripts were executed in the same basic style. But later
examples, particularly paper manuscripts, clearly show signs of
deterioration in quality.
Paubha (Thangka) Painting :- Religious
paintings worshipped as icons are known as Paubha in Nepalbhasa
and Thangka in Tibetan. The origin of Paubha or Thangka paintings
may be attributed to Nepalese artists as early as the ninth or
tenth century. Realizing the great demand for religious icons in
Tibet these artists, along with monks and traders, took with them
from Nepal not only metal sculptures but also a number of Buddhist
manuscripts. To better fulfil the ever-increasing demand, Nepalese
artists intited a new type of religious painting on cloth that
could be easily rolled up and carried along with them. This type
of painting became very popular both in Nepal and Tibet and has
remained popular to this day. One of the earliest specimens of
Nepalese Paubha painting dates from the thirteenth or fourteenth
century and shows Amitabha Surrounded by Bodhisatwas. Another
Nepalese Paubha with three dates in the inscription (the latest
one corresponding to A.D 1369), is one of the earliest known
Paubha with inscription. The 'Mandala of Vishnu", dated A.D. 1420,
is another fine example of the painting of this period. Early
Nepalese Paubha are simple in design and composition. The main
deity, a large figure, occupies the central position while
surrounded by smaller figures.
Influence of Tantrism on Paintings :-
From the fifteenth century onwards, brighter colors gradually
began to appear in the Nepalese painting. Because of the growing
importance of the Tantric cult, various aspects of Shiva and
Shakti were painted in conventional poses. Mahakala, Manjushri,
Lokeshwara and other deities were equally popular and were also
frequently represented in Nepalese paintings of later dates. The
embrace of male and female is another common motif of the Tantric
Buddhist art of this period |