EKPHRASTIC POETRY AND INDIAN MINIATURE PAINTINGS: ARTISTRY AND AESTHETICS OF DEBASISH LAHIRI’S TETHER THAT LIGHT

Authors

  • Dr. Pradipta Mukherjee Associate Professor, Department of English, Vidyasagar College for Women, University of Calcutta, Kolkata, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29121/shodhkosh.v4.i1.2023.284

Keywords:

Miniature Paintings, Ekphrastic Poetry, Intertexts, Cultural Memory, Fluidity, Historicity, Rasa, Abhisarika Nayika, Ashta Nayika, Radha, Krishna

Abstract [English]

For an internationally acclaimed Indian English poet, Debasish Lahiri, time is a recording of the lingering of light, in nature, in the mind. His recent collection of poems, Tether that Light (2022) is an attempt to follow that trail of light left in selected Indian miniature paintings, particularly Mughal, Rajasthani, Pahari, and Deccani paintings. The intricate artworks and enchanting visuals of these incredible canvases have enthralled the poet who uses the treasure trove of Indian miniatures that work as intertexts for his ekphrastic collection of poems. Given the pictorial effect of words appearing as miniature paintings, the flawless transformation from one medium to the other, Lahiri’s symbiosis between literary texts and performing arts, poetry, and painting, foregrounds how concepts, attitudes, and ideologies operate across a broader cultural spectrum that is not exclusively literary. Transcending the borders of time and space, Tether that Light not only makes way for a larger interdisciplinarity between sister arts but opens up new avenues for interrogating notions of historicity, textuality and appropriations.

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References

Anonymous. (1830). Radha and Krishna on a Bed at Night [Painting]. Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, United States.

Anonymous. (n.d.). Member of the First Generation after Nainsukh. Radha and Krishna Walking at Night, Folio from the Tehri Garhwal Series of Gita Govinda. [Painting]. 1775-1780. The Kromos Collection. New York.

Goswamy, B.N. (2022). Searching in Honeycombs. Lahiri, D. Tether that Light. Red River, 12.

Kota (1720). Radha and Krishna Walk in a Flowering Grove. [Painting]. Metropolitan Museum of Art. Manhattan, New York City, United States of America.

Lahiri, D. (2018). Tinder Tender : Poems of Love and Loitering. Authors Press.

Lahiri, D. (2021). Paysages Sans Verbes (Landscape Without Verbs). Editions Apic (Algiers/Paris).

Lahiri, D. (2021). Poppies in the Post. Authors Press.

Lahiri, D. (2022). Tether that Light. Red River.

Mehta, J. (2022, Oct. 16). Bridging the Binary. T2, The Telegraph.

Mola, R. (n.d.). Abhisarika Nayika ("The Heroine Going to Meet Her Lover at an Appointed Place”) [Painting]. 1800. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Massachusetts.

Purkhu. R. (n.d.). Radha Imagines Krishna with other Women, from Gita Govinda. [Painting].

Raja Ravi, V. (n.d.). Radha Waiting for Krishna [Painting].

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Published

2023-02-24

How to Cite

Mukherjee, P. (2023). EKPHRASTIC POETRY AND INDIAN MINIATURE PAINTINGS: ARTISTRY AND AESTHETICS OF DEBASISH LAHIRI’S TETHER THAT LIGHT. ShodhKosh: Journal of Visual and Performing Arts, 4(1), 132–140. https://doi.org/10.29121/shodhkosh.v4.i1.2023.284