शुक्रवार, 25 जुलाई 2014

Ajanta Caves - Complete Guide (Travel, History)




The Ajanta Caves are a UNESCO World Heritage Site located about a 100 kms from the city of Aurangabad in the state of Maharashtra. This incredible series of "cave temples" contain some of the most exquisite sculptures and paintings found anywhere in the country.
Ajanta has become a major tourist attraction only comparatively recently. In the early years of the century, only the most hardy and determined traveler managed to reach the place. The journey involved twelve bone-shaking hours by bullock cart from the nearest railhead, followed by a four-hour scramble up to the caves themselves. The surrounding country was inhospitable and dangerous. The local tribe, the Bhils, usually attacked strangers. Wild animals abounded – in fact the early expeditions tied white rags to bushes, as markers to warn where someone had recently been killed by a tiger. Worst of all, apparently, were the local bees. Ferocious colonies clustered in the ravine and often made it impossible to get to the caves. The first parties had to be accompanied by professional "bee exterminators," and there are stories of learned archeologists diving into the river to escape an enraged swarm.
Nowadays, all this has changed. Daily buses ply in and out of the car park area beneath the caves. Crowds flock from Bombay or faraway Delhi. Yet despite the twentieth century – the visitors, the hawkers, and the buses – Ajanta retains a powerful atmosphere, and when the people have gone and peace returns, its spirit emerges once more. Local legend says that the ravine has always been the abode of a particularly powerful nagaraja or snake god; at the twilight hours of dawn and dusk, you can believe it. Once you enter the caves, the outside world drops away; you are in another realm. The charm of this new world seeps into the mind surreptitiously and plants a strange seed, which, as it sprouts, will render ever more blurred the shifting boundary between illusion and reality.
History
It is believed that a band of wandering Buddhist monks first came to Ajanta in the 2nd century BC searching for a place to meditate during the monsoons. Ajanta was ideal – peaceful and remote from civilization. The setting was spectacular: a sharp, wide, horseshoe-shape gorge that fell steeply to a wild mountain stream flowing through the jungle below. The monks began carving crude caves into this rock face for themselves, and a new temple form was born. Over seven centuries, the cave temples of Ajanta evolved into a work of splendid art. Structural engineers are awestruck by the sheer brilliance of these ancient masters who, undaunted by the limitations of seemingly crude implements, materials, and labor, created this marvel of art and architectural splendor.
In all, 29 caves were carved, 15 of which were left unfinished; some of them were viharas (monasteries) complete with hard stone pillows carved onto the monks’ stone beds; others, chaityas (Buddhist cathedrals). The chaityas were for worship, whereas the viharas were principally for living. Of the thirty caves here, five are chaityas (Caves 9, 10, 19, 26, and 29), and the other twenty-five are viharas. All of them were intricately and profusely decorated with sculptures and murals depicting the many incarnations of Buddha. Strictly speaking, the caves are not caves at all, but temples, hollowed out of the living rock. They can be divided chronologically into two groups. The earlier group (8, 9, 10, 12, 13, and 15A) belong to the Hinayana sect of Buddhism and are assigned to the second century B.C. The remainder belong to the Mahayana sect, and date from about AD. 450 to 650.
By A.D. 650 Buddhism was already on the wane in India. The monk-artists abandoned their work, and the temples were swallowed up by the jungle. Ellora became the pre-eminent cave temple after this period. Ajanta lay forgotten for twelve hundred years, lost to the world and hidden under creepers, shrubs, and jungle. Wild animals took over the caves, rain soaked and crumbled the walls, and most of the shrines were completely silted up.
Then, in 1819, it was rediscovered. A party of British army officers, attached to the Madras Army, were on exercises in the nearby Indhyahadri Hills. One free day, one of them, named John Smith, was tiger hunting in the Ajanta area, which was famed for its wild animals. Following the riverbed in search of game, he met a local boy who insisted that the gorge below was full of tigers' lairs. He took Smith to a promontory that overlooks the curving ravine. Looking down into the ravine, the soldier suddenly noticed something peeping out above the tangled jungle below. It was the top of the facade of one of the caves.

A mural from the Ajanta caves, now at the National Museum in Delhi.
It was some time before the importance of the find was fully appreciated. A dry paper read by a Mr. William Erskine to the Bombay Literary Society in 1822 described the caves as “having sitting figures with curled wigs. No traces of the Brahminical religion were discovered. The paintings were in a decent state of preservation.” A more enthusiastic visitor arrived in 1823. This was Lieutenant Alexander of the 16th Lancers. He had to run the gauntlet of the Bhils: “They were a most savage-looking race,” he tells us, “perfectly black, low in stature and almost naked. Our firearms prevented them from attacking us; and we were allowed to proceed unmolested.” Alexander visited many of the caves and was delighted by "their marvelous freshness of color."
Other visitors came and went, many of them chipping off souvenirs from the frescoed walls. Gradually the caves attracted scholarly attention. In 1843 the famous architectural historian, James Fergusson, visited Ajanta and was worried by the combined attacks of the elements and the souvenir hunters. He begged the East India Company (which still had control of the area) to do something to preserve and protect the paintings "before decay and the recklessness of tourists has entirely obliterated them." His plea resulted in the appointment of Captain Robert Gill, an artist attached to the Madras Army, whose brief was to copy all he could of the frescoes.
The Story of Robert Gill
Gill arrived in Ajanta in 1844 and spent the rest of his life there. He was utterly devoted to the place; the elemental hillside became his Walden. Gill was indefatigable. He photographed the frescoes with a magnesium lamp; made painstaking tracings, copies, and colored drawings; painted by the flickering light of oil lamps. For twenty-seven years he lived there. He spurned a comfortable bungalow in the Ajanta village, preferring to sleep in the caves themselves, or in a makeshift thatched hut he built himself on the hillside. He lived in constant danger from the Bhils and the wild animals; in fact he is reputed to have shot 150 tigers with his own gun.

Robert Gill at Ajanta (1869).
Happily there was one relief from his dedicated life of austerity. He fell in love with, and married, a dark-eyed Indian beauty. In the evenings, after a day spent painting, he would watch her dance, as she moved with the same grace that animated his beloved frescoes.
They say there is a curse on Ajanta. Many years ago Indra, the King of the Gods, allowed the other gods and goddesses to descend to earth for one night's celebration, on the condition that they returned to heaven before the cock crowed the dawn. They came to Ajanta, and so great were their revels that they quite forgot the cock's warning crow. As a punishment they were frozen into the walls and statues of the caves, and there they will remain for all eternity. Yet despite their transgression, these foolish gods are still divine. Any mere mortal who tries to deface, or even reproduce, their fallen forms, will meet with untold misfortune.
Gill certainly had his share. He suffered intermittent illness, once nearly dying of dysentery. In 1857, during the First War of Indian Independence, he was forced to leave the caves. Shortly after his return he fell while climbing, broke his leg, and was out of action for many weeks.
As he finished each batch of paintings, he had it shipped to London from Bombay. After twenty years' solitary work, he had virtually completed the mammoth task of copying all the most important paintings of Ajanta. All the facsimiles were gathered together in the Crystal Palace to be exhibited to the public. Then, in December 1866, the Palace was destroyed by fire. Three or four of Gill's paintings were saved, the rest went up in flames.
After the fire Gill struggled on for five years, but he was a broken man. In the end he sold off what was left of his drawings and equipment for a few pounds. Soon after he became ill and died. He is buried in the little cemetery of Bhusawal, just north of the caves he had loved so fruitlessly.
The Curse of Ajanta
But at least the rest of the world was now aware of the immense importance of the site. In the 1870s the Bombay School of Arts sent out a team to the caves under its principal, John Griffiths. The team spent four seasons copying the paintings. As the facsimiles were finished, they were shipped back to London. Mindful of his predecessor's fate, Griffiths urged his London sponsors to photograph the paintings as they arrived. Unfortunately, the expense involved was considered too great. The paintings were stored in the annex of the Victoria and Albert Museum in Kensington.
In 1885 fire broke out. Eighty-seven of the paintings – many of them canvases over thirty feet (nine meters) square-were destroyed. The extraordinary thing was, that though the fire raged for more than three hours throughout the large building, the only objects of value that were damaged were the Ajanta facsimiles.
In 1918 a team of Japanese Buddhist artists, under the leadership of Professor Sawamura, head of the Oriental Arts Department of Kyoto University, arrived at Ajanta. Their concern was primarily with the carvings. Their technique was to dampen rice paper and press it against the stone to obtain an exact impression from which reproduction molds could be made. Hundreds of these delicate casts were made and carefully shipped back to japan. A few years later they were all destroyed by an earthquake.
Throughout the years the souvenir hunters continued to desecrate the frescoes, often cutting out whole slabs of painting. Some of these later found their way into the world's great collections. But things took a turn for the better in 1920.
A lover of Indian culture, Lady Herringham, alerted the Nizam of Hyderabad, under whose jurisdiction Ajanta was, to the deterioration in the murals. On her advice he had two Italian restorers brought out: a Signor Cecconi and his assistant. They undertook work to fix the remaining paintings to the wall, principally by injecting casein into them. At the same time leaks in the caves were plugged, lights installed, and an effective guard system established. But the curse of Ajanta was operating, nonetheless.
The Griffiths expedition had applied varnish to the paintings to render them more visible, and the two Italians now applied a coating of shellac and alcohol as a fixative. These varnishes gradually darkened with the years. In time they became increasingly opaque and then cracked, trapping dust between the layer of varnish and the actual surface of the paintings. Thus the paintings were again vulnerable to the damage by seepage, humidity, and bat urine that had plagued them since they were discovered.

A mural of a dancing girl. On the left is Gill's copy. On the right is the mural today, having deteriorated.
Ajanta has been under the care of the Archeological Survey of India since 1951. Recent preservation work has been intensive. Flaked portions are shaved off, stains removed, and the paintings strengthened by a mixture of solvents to arrest further deterioration. Preservatives such as polyvinyl acetate are being applied. In the course of this work several new paintings have been uncovered, notably in Caves 6 and 17.
Architecture of Ajanta Caves
The original entrance to the caves was along the riverbed, each cave having a flight of stairs leading up to it. The first to be excavated was Cave 10. Then came the other Hinayana sanctuaries spreading out to either side of it. The Mahayana caves were added later on the ends of the existing crescent.
At both Ellora and Ajanta, monumental facades and statues were chipped our of solid, hard rock, but at Ajanta, an added dimension survived the centuries, expressed in India's most remarkable examples of cave paintings. Onto a carefully prepared plaster of clay, cow dung, chopped rice husks, and lime spread onto the rough rock walls, the monks devotedly painted their works with only natural local pigments: red ocher, burnt brick, copper oxide, lampblack, and dust from green rocks that had been crushed.
The Ajanta caves are like chapters of a splendid epic in visual form, recalling the life of the Buddha and illustrating tales from Buddhist jatakas (fables). As the artists lovingly told the story of the Buddha, they portrayed the life and civilization they knew. The total effect is that of a magic carpet transporting you back into a drama played by nobles, wise men, and commoners. When the electric spot lights flicker onto the paintings, the figures seem to come alive.
Opinions vary as to the most exquisite of the Ajanta caves. The best paintings are generally considered to be found in Caves 1, 2, 16, 17, and 19, and the best sculptures in Caves 1, 4, 17, 19, and 26. (The caves are numbered from west to east, not in chronological order.) Most popular are the paintings in Cave 1, of the Bodhisattva Avalokitesvara and Bodhisattva Padmapani. Padmapani, or the "one with the lotus in his hand," is considered to be the alter ego of the Lord Buddha who assumed the duties of the Buddha when he disappeared. Padmapani is depicted with his sinuous-hipped wife, one of the most widely reproduced figures of Ajanta.
Cave 2 is remarkable for its ceiling decorations and its murals relating the birth of the Buddha. For its sheer exuberance and joie de vivre, the painting in Cave 2 of women on a swing is judged the best.

The entrance to one of the main chaityas.
In Cave 4, sculpture is the main interest. It is the largest vihara in Ajanta and depicts a man and a woman fleeing from a mad elephant and a man giving up his resistance to a tempting woman.
The earliest cave is Cave 10, a chaitya dating from 200 BC filled with Buddhas and dominated by an enormous stupa. However, it is only from AD 100 that the exquisite brush-and-line work begins. In breathtaking detail, the Shadanta Jataka, a legend about the Buddha, is depicted on the wall in a continuous panel.
The mystical heights attained by the artist-monks reach their zenith in Caves 16 and 17, where the viewer is released from the bonds of time and space. Here one is faced by a continuous narrative that spreads horizontally and vertically, evolving into a panoramic whole-at once logical and stunning. One painting here is riveting; known as "The Dying Princess," it is believed to represent Sundari, the wife of the Buddha's half-brother, Nanda, who left her to become a monk. There is an excellent view of the river from Cave 16, which may have been the entrance to the entire series of caves.
Cave 17 possesses the greatest number of pictures undamaged by time. Luscious heavenly damsels fly effortlessly overhead, a prince makes love to a princess, and the Buddha tames a raging elephant. Other favorite paintings include the scene of a woman applying lipstick and of a princess performing sringar (her toilet).
A number of unfinished caves were abandoned mysteriously, but even these are worth a visit. A steep climb of 100 steps rakes you to them. You may also take the bridle path, a gentler ascent, with a crescent pathway running alongside the caves. From here, there is a magnificent view of the ravines of the Waghura River.
Travel
The Ajanta Caves are about 100 km (62 miles) northeast of the city of Aurangabad in Maharashtra and around 400 kilometers (250 miles) from Mumbai. Aurangabad and Bombay are only about 45 minutes apart by air. The caves are closed on Mondays and open from 9AM to 5:30PM on other days, including national holidays. Flash photography is not allowed inside the caves. A video permit costs Rs.25. Many of the caves are quite dark so bring your own torch if you want to see any detail. Guides can be hired at the tourist office near Cave 1. The cost is about Rs350 for four people for a two-hour tour.


कोई टिप्पणी नहीं:

एक टिप्पणी भेजें