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| Vol. 4, Issue 5 May 2012 |
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Books |
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Review |
The Enduring Myth of Ravi Varma
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| Two books that fall prey to the mythology of the ‘artist’ |
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Published : 1 October 2010 |
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COURTESY OF GOVERNMENT MUSEUM, CHENNAI |
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| Raja Ravi Varma: Portrait of the artist as an old man.
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| I |
T IS FAIR TO SAY that the afterlife of Ravi Varma’s images
has been as eventful as his own. Fêted widely as
the ‘first modern Indian painter’ during his lifetime,
the years after his death saw a dramatic change in the reception
of his work by the art historical community. In the
first decade of the 20th century, the Bengal School (centred
around the Tagores) had
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established itself as an avant-garde movement that proclaimed an ‘authentic’ modern Indian art and the realism of Ravi Varma’s works was seen as derivative, inspired by Western academic sources. Stalwarts like EB Havell, Principal of the Government School of Art, Calcutta, and Ananda Coomaraswamy dismissed his works as extravagant and theatrical and this characterisation continued over the course of the 20th century. In 1993, the painter A Ramachandran and the art conservator Rupika Chawla curated a major exhibition of Ravi Varma at the National Museum in New Delhi, and it announced a renewed interest in the artist at a moment when the art world was just beginning to embrace popular culture.
And so the myth of Ravi Varma persisted, not in the least
because of his pioneering efforts in setting up a modern
press to mass-produce his paintings—chromolithographs
of gods and goddesses that persist in the ubiquitous calendar
art of today. The spurt of interest in Indian visual culture
since the 1990s, as evidenced in writings on vernacular
photography, cinematic culture and bazaar prints, has led
to our considering Ravi Varma the ‘father of modern Indian
visual culture’—one whose mythological prototypes have
provided templates for visualising the culture of kitsch in
which we find ourselves immersed.
Rather than this guise as the father of kitsch, these two
recent books on Ravi Varma adopt a different approach, examining
the aesthetic value of Ravi Varma’s oil paintings
and his career as a ‘gentleman artist.’ Rupika Chawla’s is a well-researched biography that comes the closest to a catalogue
raisonné of the artist, featuring 436 paintings in rich
colour. Chawla has meticulously gathered archival material
on Ravi Varma—letters, newspaper clippings, conversations
with experts—and consulted Marathi and Malayalam
sources to produce a veritable tome on the artist. Locating
him within the complex social hierarchies in Kerala, Chawla documents how Ravi Varma was able to cast off his provincial
identity for a pan-Indian cosmopolitanism, travelling
the breadth of the country in quest of a personal and professional
vision. Chawla’s book is particularly rich in details
about the palace intrigues involving Ravi Varma’s royal patrons
(the courts of Baroda, Mysore, Travancore), revealing
the complex place that an independent painter in the late 19th
century occupied vis-à-vis his benefactors. Unlike the royal
ateliers of the 18th century where painters were beholden to
their rulers, Ravi Varma was able to carve out an individual
professional career that spanned the nation, including both
the British and Indian elite in his roster of clients.
While the bulk of Ravi Varma’s work consisted of portraits,
his fame rested on his Pauranik paintings, which
dramatised scenes from the Ramayana and Mahabharata
in the European-inspired naturalism that was in vogue at
the time. In a public visual arena dominated by Victorian
commercial and academic imagery, the very presence of
Pauranik subject matter was a powerful reminder of the
glories and legends of a shared Indian heritage. Its role in
visualising a national past when the very contours of such
a nation were indistinct, cannot be undermined. Here
Chawla’s analysis wears thin, as she chooses to recount
the stories depicted in the Pauranik paintings and the circumstances
of their commissioning without relating them
to the larger political project of nationalism within which
they were implicated. In comparison, Christopher Pinney’s
Photos of the Gods: The Printed Image and Political Struggle
in India is a compelling account of Ravi Varma’s images being
drawn into the vortex of nationalist theatre, particularly
by Bal Gangadhar Tilak and Kakasaheb Khadilkar. Chawla,
however, steers resolutely away from the uncomfortable
political questions Ravi Varma’s art raises, drawing an
idealised portrait of the artist as a creative visionary. The
criticisms against Ravi Varma are recounted and summarily
dismissed and Chawla’s biography becomes an exercise
in connoisseurship, eschewing politics for aesthetics.
Deepanjana Pal’s book The Painter: A Life of Ravi Varma
is more forthright in acknowledging the criticisms against
Varma—“His paintings are seen as too mannered, too Hindu,
too literal, too melodramatic”—but she brushes these away
as insignificant in the face of his “sensual and voluptuous
heroines [who] remain eye-catching even in today’s age of
Photoshopped perfection.” (p 112). Her dramatised biography pays keen attention to Varma’s female subjects, both on
canvas and in his life. Taking a painting of a Malayali girl
bathing as her point of departure, Pal engages with her coquettish
gaze and those of his other heroines as indicative
of the changes taking place in late 19th century gender relations.
Lengthy sections follow speculating about his wife
(Bhagirathi), her place within the matriarchal Nair society
and how she might have dealt with Varma’s extended absences
on his trips across India.
| COURTESY OF SRI CHITRA ART GALLERY, THIRUVANANTHAPURAM |
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Shakunthala attempts to seduce King Dushyanta. |
Pal’s writing is engaging and vibrant and she is skilled at
bringing the paintings to life, but the book relies much too
heavily upon unverifiable accounts that encourage speculation
and provide dramatic grist to her mill. To be sure,
she deliberately sets apart her own creative liberties from
matters of fact in conveniently italicised portions in which
she deals with the rumours and legends that have gathered
around the figure of Ravi Varma. However, the non-italicised
portions are equally prone to exploiting rumour for
conjecture. Consider the case of Bhagirathi, about whom
nothing is known:
“Had Bhagirathi been known for her modernism, her
move to Thiruvananthapuram may have been seen as an attempt to act upon her own desires. Perhaps that
is actually what it was. Perhaps she was meant to give
her elder sister, whose husband was still under house
arrest in Harippad, companionship. Perhaps Ravi
asked his young bride to come with him to sample the
life he so enjoyed.” (p 98)
Or:
“There must have been some pressure upon Bhagirathi
to enter into a new sambandham. She wasn’t too old,
her family was respected, and there could be no doubts
about her childbearing ability. Perhaps the decision to
remain Ravi Varma’s wife demanded the same strength
and resilience of Bhagirathi that we attribute today to
those who leave husbands.” (p 119)
| COURTESY OF JAGANMOHAN PALACE, MYSORE |
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Draupadi
carrying refreshments
to the royal court. |
While the genre of the dramatised biography necessitates
taking certain liberties with documented fact, what
is disconcerting in this case is that despite Ravi Varma’s
widespread popularity, the literature on him has remained
resolutely opaque on his personal life, his drives and his desires.
We have no personal letters, only official ones, and little
evidence of his ties to family, friends or loved ones other
than the documented circumstances of his life. In this scenario,
it is all too inviting to fill in the gaps of his personal
motivations and his intimate thoughts with speculations
that derive from our modern understanding of the artist
as a romantic figure. To complicate matters, the myths and legends of Ravi Varma’s life are deeply implicated in this
construction of the artist as genius. We have the obligatory
stories of him painting on the walls as a child, the divine intimations
of his birth, his having mastered the techniques
of oil painting on his own, and his liaisons with the models
and prostitutes he painted.
| I |
HAVE BEEN QUIBBLING over the fact and fiction of Ravi
Varma’s life, because despite Chawla’s careful attention
to detail and Pal’s italicised disclaimers, both these
books fall prey to the mythology of the ‘Artist,’ presenting
him as a revered figure who single-handedly launched the
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project of modern Indian art. The truth, as we know, is
much more complex—a host of painters were churned out by the government-instituted art schools in Bombay and Calcutta, but were never really as successful as Ravi Varma and remained involved in commercial ventures that paid small change. Ravi Varma was by no means an exceptional painter, but his aristocratic background and proximity to royal patrons granted him a profile quite unlike those of artists from more modest backgrounds. The heroic narrative that has canonised him in the popular imagination as the ‘painter prince’ seized upon precisely these elements, establishing him as a worthy native who could equal the colonial master. In Ravi Varma’s case, his identity is so enmeshed with the celebratory accounts of his genius that he has become a prototypical figure. To uncritically endorse his mythology is to overlook how Ravi Varma’s aristocratic pedigree and romantic imagination cast him perfectly in the role of the ‘first modern Indian artist’ that would henceforth become a nationalist rallying point.
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Krishna’s Embassy to
Duryodhana |
This emergence of the mythic figure of the Artist in the
late 19th century is all the more remarkable when pitted
against the lowly status of the painter that had prevailed
until the mid-19th century. In early India, painting was one
of the 64 arts specified by Vatsyayana in his Kamasutra,
which included, amongst others, carpentry, architecture,
lovemaking and the arts of combing hair. As several commentators
have pointed out, the artist did not enjoy a high
reputation in the social hierarchy, although a proximity to
royal patrons granted him a somewhat higher standing. According
to art historian Stella Kramrisch, there was, in fact,
no strict differentiation between the artist and the craftsman.
Although artists could belong to all four castes, they
were generally associated with the Shudras, the lowest.
Nationalist writing through the turn of the 20th century
struggled to change this perception of the artist and establish
the credentials of an Indian tradition of the ‘fine arts.’
While one strand of art historical writing—Coomaraswamy
and Lockwood Kipling—sought to elevate the figure of the
craftsman and his work to the status of a fine art, there
was a simultaneous bid to lay claim to the fine arts which
were seen as embodied in what art historian Partha Mitter
has called the “gentleman artist.” A member of the newly emerging Westernised elite who found professional and
bureaucratic careers centred around cities, the gentleman
artist distinguished himself from the subaltern craftsman
not only in his use of the progressive medium of oils on
canvas but also his educational background and his class
identity. The changing patterns of patronage and the institutional
infrastructure of exhibitions and art journals that
had emerged in the late 19th century participated in this
production of a class of artists from genteel, educated backgrounds
who aspired to the cultural and romantic vision of
artistic genius popular in the Western world.
In an acknowledgement of the changing status of the
painter in the contemporary imagination, an essay on Ravi
Varma’s career in The Modern Review in 1907 described
him as a nation-builder who showed the moral courage of
a gifted ‘high-born’ in taking up the “degrading profession
of painting.” In accounts like these, Ravi Varma heroically
takes on the poor artisan’s burden, as it were, raising artistic
practice from its craft-like origins to the status of a
fine art. Ravi Varma’s career as an independent painter
with commissions that spanned the breadth of the country
granted him a profile quite unlike those of traditional artisans
dependant upon the declining patronage of the princely
courts or British officers of the East India Company.
It is the legacy of this towering figure that has remained in the popular imagination and appears to have inspired
current interest in Ravi Varma. And Chawla and Pal are not
the only ones who have produced biographies of the artist.
Ketan Mehta’s yet to be released biopic on Ravi Varma,
Rang Rasiya, is a similar valourisation of the artist as an
iconoclastic figure committed to artistic freedom. Mehta’s
fictionalised narrative has Ravi Varma face charges of obscenity
on account of his drawings of semi-nude women, in
a thinly veiled allegory of the contemporary charges against
MF Husain. Apparently, the freedoms of art only revolve
around the licence to depict female bodies! Feminists have
raised objections to the trope of artistic genius since the
1980s, arguing that this selective genius seldom descended
upon women and was often implicated in fantasies of power
over women’s bodies. Yet, the romanticised figure of the artist
with his bevy of beautiful models has held sway.
| PRIVATE COLLECTION |
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Shakuntala contemplating what to write in a love letter to King Dushyanta in a painting from 1894. |
Through all this, Ravi Varma has emerged as a charged
site upon whose figure alternative histories of elite and
popular art have been written. At a contemporary moment when the elite and popular are increasingly intertwined—
with MF Husain’s interest in Bollywood and Bhupen
Khakhar’s ‘pop’—Ravi Varma presents an enigma. Considered
within the contemporary culture of the celebrity artist
and the ever-growing market for modern Indian art, the
idea of the heroic artist who spoke for the nation has immediate
appeal, not only for the committed art aficionado but
also for the general public.
The interest in Ravi Varma also coincides with a revival
in the fortunes of other populist artists thrown by the
wayside as the narrative of avant-garde modernism gained
ground through the 20th century. William-Adolphe Bouguereau
(whose name Pal consistently misspells throughout
the book), a much-respected academic artist of the 19th
century admired by Ravi Varma, has seen his stock rise in
recent years, as have the works of the American traditionalist,
Norman Rockwell (currently showing at the Smithsonian
American Art Museum). In the faultlines created by
the waning influence of high modernism, there is a closer
appreciation of the appeal of these artists and a more
forgiving approach to their simplistic idealism. Rather
than the culture of dissent and negation that inspired the
avant-garde, there is a nostalgic invocation of the populist
artists’ wholesome fare at play in the current revival of
Ravi Varma.
Images reproduced with permission from Raja Ravi Varma: Painter of Colonial India by Rupika Chawla, Mapin Publishing, 2010.
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