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Copy of painting in the caves of Ajanta (cave 17)

Oil Painting
1881-1883 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The cave paintings of Ajanta are the oldest surviving examples of painting in India. They depict stories from the lives of the Buddha (the jatakas) and date from the 1st century BC to about AD 480. The cave complex was discovered in 1819 and since then attempts have been made to document the paintings inside them. In 1844 Major Robert Gill was commissioned to make copies. Unfortunately most of the paintings he completed were destroyed in a fire in 1866. To make up for this loss, from 1872, John Griffiths from the Bombay school of Art and seven Indian students spent every winter for the following 13 years at the caves producing approximately 300 paintings, of which this is an example.

This painting can be found on the verandah of cave seventeen. It depicts scenes from the Dhanapala jataka in which a devious monk Devadatta wants to usurp power from the Buddha and take over the monastic order. With the aid of King Ajatasatru he plans to assassinate the Buddha by releasing a wild elephant called Dhanapala into the path of the Buddha. As soon as the elephant is let loose in the courtyard of Devadetta’s palace it rampages into the main street and grabs a horse and rider in it’s trunk as if to crush them. The ladies looking out of their balconies look on the scene in horror. The rampaging elephant is eventually made calm by the Buddha and bows down in front of him. Through the power of his benevolence the elephant has been tamed.

The white patches on the painting are placed over fragile areas that require conservation work.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Titles
  • Copy of painting in the caves of Ajanta (cave 17) (series title)
  • Copy of painting from the caves of Ajanta (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Oil on canvas
Brief description
Copy of Fresco 'H' in Cave '17' in the caves of Ajanta by John Griffiths and students from the Bombay School of Art, oil on canvas, 1872-1885, India.
Dimensions
  • Painting height: 1146mm
  • Painting width: 4890mm
  • With frame height: 1175mm
  • With frame width: 4913mm
  • With frame depth: 40mm
Marks and inscriptions
Verandah cave 17 16 x 3-10" (On back of canvas in black paint)
Credit line
Received from the India Office
Object history
Historical significance: The paintings inside the caves of Ajanta tell stories from the lives of the Buddha. This painting depicts scenes from the Dhanapala jataka.

Narrative:

The devious monk Devadatta wants to usurp power from the Buddha and take over the monastic order. With the aid of King Ajatasatru he plans to assassinate the Buddha by releasing a wild elephant called Dhanapala into the path of the Buddha. (IS.87-1887)

As the king has announced that he is going to release the elephant the next day, a citizen of the town who has invited the Buddha to his house sits despondently outside it as he believes that the Buddha will no longer come. (IS.40-1885)

As soon as the elephant is let loose in the courtyard of Devadetta’s palace it rampages into the main street and grabs a horse and rider in it’s trunk as if to crush them. The ladies looking out of their balconies look on the scene in horror. (IS.87-1887)

The rampaging elephant is eventually made calm by the Buddha and bows down in front of him. Through the power of his benevolence he has been tamed. (IS.87-1887)
Historical context
The cave paintings of Ajanta are the oldest surviving examples of painting in India. They depict stories from the lives of the Buddha (the jatakas) and date from the 1st century BC to about AD 480. The cave complex was discovered in 1819 and since then attempts have been made to document the paintings inside them. In 1844 Major Robert Gill was commissioned to make copies. Unfortunately most of the paintings he completed were destroyed in a fire in 1866. To make up for this loss, from 1872, John Griffiths from the Bombay school of Art and seven Indian students spent every winter for the following 13 years at the caves producing approximately 300 paintings, of which this is an example.
Production
Painted by John Griffiths and students from the Bombay School of Art
Subject depicted
Place depicted
Summary
The cave paintings of Ajanta are the oldest surviving examples of painting in India. They depict stories from the lives of the Buddha (the jatakas) and date from the 1st century BC to about AD 480. The cave complex was discovered in 1819 and since then attempts have been made to document the paintings inside them. In 1844 Major Robert Gill was commissioned to make copies. Unfortunately most of the paintings he completed were destroyed in a fire in 1866. To make up for this loss, from 1872, John Griffiths from the Bombay school of Art and seven Indian students spent every winter for the following 13 years at the caves producing approximately 300 paintings, of which this is an example.

This painting can be found on the verandah of cave seventeen. It depicts scenes from the Dhanapala jataka in which a devious monk Devadatta wants to usurp power from the Buddha and take over the monastic order. With the aid of King Ajatasatru he plans to assassinate the Buddha by releasing a wild elephant called Dhanapala into the path of the Buddha. As soon as the elephant is let loose in the courtyard of Devadetta’s palace it rampages into the main street and grabs a horse and rider in it’s trunk as if to crush them. The ladies looking out of their balconies look on the scene in horror. The rampaging elephant is eventually made calm by the Buddha and bows down in front of him. Through the power of his benevolence the elephant has been tamed.

The white patches on the painting are placed over fragile areas that require conservation work.
Bibliographic references
  • Griffiths, J, The paintings in the Buddhist cave temples of Ajanta, India, 1896
  • Burgess, J, Notes on the Bauddha Rock-Temples of Ajanta, Bombay, 1879
  • Schlingloff, D, Guide to the Ajanta paintings, Vol. 1, New Delhi, 1999.
Collection
Accession number
IS.87-1887

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Record createdNovember 25, 2005
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