Artwork Page for King Bana in his court, from an Usha-Aniruddha

Details / Information for King Bana in his court, from an Usha-Aniruddha

King Bana in his court, from an Usha-Aniruddha

c. 1760–70
Measurements
Overall: 21.9 x 32.1 cm (8 5/8 x 12 5/8 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

Clara Taplin Rankin, the donor of this painting, was a trustee of the CMA as well as the Musical Arts Association and the Cleveland Institute of Music.

Description

This portrait of a demon king depicts him listening to the report of one of his ministers. He may be hearing the news that his daughter Usha has been secretly receiving Krishna’s grandson Aniruddha in her bedchamber. The artist has depicted Bana with his 20 arms emerging like tentacles from his body. The members of his multicolored demon court are imaginatively rendered combinations of beasts and humans. In the background, demons harass holy men by burning their huts and chasing them away from their settlements.
A horizontally oriented tempera painting depicts two scenes within a white structure. Left, crowned and many-armed King Bana sits on a golden platform under a scalloped arch, surrounded by horned demons with red, green, and gray skin. Right, gray-skinned demons play music in a courtyard before a pink wall. Beyond the wall, green hills rise with two white towers and a large red flag.

King Bana in his court, from an Usha-Aniruddha

c. 1760–70

Northern India, Pahari kingdoms

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