Madhubani Paintings Patachitra from Orissa Warli Paintings Kalamkari Paintings Gond Paintings Kalighat Paintings
Orissa's Paata Painting
Scroll Painting on Tussar Silk


18.0" x 12.0"

Price: $65.00

SOLD

Viewed times since 2nd Oct, 2008
Sage Vyasa had mentally composed a vast poem and was in quest for a scribe who could record it. Brahma suggests that he address Ganapati, invoke him properly and invite him to write the epic. Ganesha accepts to be the scribe provided that the movement of his stylus on the palm leaves would not be interrupted even once. Vyasa in turn asks him not to record anything before understanding it perfectly.

In the grove, outside his cottage, sage Vyasa sits on a leopard skin dictating the epic. Close to him lie the yoga danda and his kamandalu. In the niche of the cottage wall is a lit diya. Opposite him sits Ganesha on a small rug listening intently as Vyasa explains with his index finger raised. Vyasa's hair are knotted at the top like most sages and he also wears tulsi beads in his neck and arms. His gaze is set in the distance as he visualizes the epic.

As for Ganesha, he is represented in pristine white colour. With great concentration, his long eye-brows raised and the eye very attentive, he commences to write the Mahabharata. Eager to confine every word spoken by Vyasa in ink, and in his haste to write, Ganesha has allowed his scarf to slide behind his back. His vahana, the mouse, patiently waits behind him, for Ganesha to successfully complete the venture and then carry him back to his abode.

This description by Kiranjyot.

Of Related Interest:

The Scripting of the Mahabharata (Batik Painting on Cotton)

Ganesha the Writer (Miniature Painting on Paper)

Ganesha Scribing the Mahabharata (Water Color Painting On Hand Carved Marble Saucer with Manual Carving)

Ganesha as the Scribe (Stone Color with Black Soot on Paper)


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