Halebid. Hoysalesvara Temple. Detail.

dc.contributor.authorRowland, Benjamin
dc.contributor.authorPhotographer: Arthur Llewellyn Basham
dc.coverage.spatialIndia (Halebidu, Karnataka)
dc.date.accessioned2019-10-15T01:27:35Z
dc.date.available2019-10-15T01:27:35Z
dc.date.created1953
dc.date.updated2019-10-15T01:27:35Z
dc.description[A] feature of Hoysala temples is the incrustation of sculpture that covers them literally from top to bottom. The material of most of these shrines is chloritic schist, a very fine-grained stone much more tractable to the chisel than sandstone or granite. It has the added virtue of being soft to work when first quarried and turning to adamantine hardness on exposure to the air. Underlying the plastic exuberance there [is] a strict iconographical framework governing the installation of divinities and epic narratives. Hoysalesvara temple surpasses all others in the prodigality of its sculptural embellishment, and shows the fixed order of decoration for the base: in the lowest tier is an endless defile of elephants, symbols of stability
dc.descriptionnext a row of lions, emblems of valour
dc.descriptionabove a tier of horsemen for speed, and still higher makaras and hamsa, the geese or birds of Brahma. Above this again, is a frieze of divinities conceived like so many separate panels set side by side, each suggesting an enormous enlargment of a small sculpture in sandalwood or ivory. A kind of Rococo over-ripeness, but however smothered in carving, it actually carries out and does not interfere with the main structural lines of the building it ornaments.
dc.format.extent35mm
dc.format.mediummounted transparency
dc.format.mediumb&w
dc.format.mimetypeimage/tiff
dc.identifierANUA 682-1654
dc.identifier.otherIM-766
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1885/176650
dc.language.isoen_AU
dc.provenanceDigitised by the Australian National University in 2019
dc.relation.ispartofseriesBasham Collection
dc.rights.licenseThis item is provided for research purposes. Contact the Australian National University Archives at butlin.archives@anu.edu.au for permission to use.
dc.subjectHoysala, South India, Mysore
dc.subjectarchitecture
dc.subjectstone sculpture
dc.subjectbook scan
dc.titleHalebid. Hoysalesvara Temple. Detail.
dc.typeImage
dspace.entity.typeANUArchivesItem
local.description.notesSource: B. Rowland, Art and Architecture of India, London, Penguin, 1953, ill. 125 & pp. 193-4
local.identifier.uidSubmittedByu1054600 || U4962371

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