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Madhu Madhavi Ragini

Creator Name

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Cultural Context

Central India, Malwa

Date

Creation: c. 1630–40

About the Work

Cleveland Museum of Art Object Description
One of the first paintings to be published and exhibited as an example of native Indian court painting without foreign stylistic influence, this work emphasizes the expression of mood and emotion rather than pictorial narrative. Through bold contrasting color, suggestive gaze, and poetic trope, the viewer accesses the charged excitement of lovers about to be united with the coming of the monsoon at night.

The reclining hero admires the alluring form of his beloved who, startled by the lightning and the cry of the peacock, stops and twists around in a dramatic pause that sets off her figure to especially good effect. She raises one hand to feel the first drops of monsoon rain that signal the beginning of the season ...

Work details

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Title

Madhu Madhavi Ragini

Creator

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Worktype

Painting

Cultural Context

Central India, Malwa

Material

Gum tempera, ink, and gold on paper

Dimensions

Overall: 19.1 x 14.6 cm (7 1/2 x 5 3/4 in.);
height: 0.191metre;
width: 0.146metre

Technique

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Language

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Date

Creation: c. 1630–40

Provenance

Ananda K. Coomaraswamy [1877-1947] sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art, ?-1925; The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH, 1925-; Gift of J. H. Wade

Style Period

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Rights

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CC0
CC0

Inscription

Inscription in Hindi on reverse: Madhu Madhavi, the ragini of Hindol: a heroine who has come to her lord. The eye sees less than all and is at variance with thought (paraphrased from Coomaraswamy, 1916); title repeated in Persian.

Location

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Subjects

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Topic

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Related Content

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All Works in Curationist’s archives can be reproduced and used freely. How to attribute this Work:

Madhu Madhavi Ragini, c. 1630–40, Cleveland Museum of Art. CC0.

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