Celestial Musician (Gandharva)

11th century
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 240
A semidivine celestial musician to the gods is shown playing a flute, standing beneath the canopy of a flowering tree. This bracket figure was intended to decorate a pillar capital of the interior of a Hindu temple of the western Chalukyas. Temples of the southern Deccan favored the use of such figures of celestial musicians and dancers, poised at an angle between the capital of a pillar and the temple's interior ceiling stones to form a bridge between the worldly and heavenly spheres, and to make explicit the notion of the temple as a heavenly palace.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Celestial Musician (Gandharva)
  • Period: Western Chalukyan period
  • Date: 11th century
  • Culture: India (Karnataka, possibly Dharwar)
  • Medium: Slate
  • Dimensions: H. 40 3/4 in. (103.5 cm)
  • Classification: Sculpture
  • Credit Line: Gift of Florence and Herbert Irving, in honor of Philippe de Montebello, 2008
  • Object Number: 2008.537
  • Curatorial Department: Asian Art

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