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  • The vandalisation of heritage

    Hindu, India
    Feb 10 2008


    The vandalisation of heritage


    T.S. SUBRAMANIAN



    Murals from the 14th to 17th centuries in temples across Tamil Nadu
    are being painted over or `restored' gaudily by unqualified
    personnel. It is time we acted more responsibly to preserve these
    masterpieces of a bygone era, feels David Shulman, renowned
    Indologist. Excerpts from an interview...

    Photo: The 17th century paintings on the ceiling of Devasiriya
    Mandapam at Thyagarajaswamy temple IN Tiruvarur are masterpieces of
    south Indian cultural heritage. If they are not conserved very soon,
    they will be lost.


    Neither subtle nor nuanced: The `restored' painting (right) at the
    Jaina temple at Tiruparuttikkunram, near Kanchipuram in Tamil Nadu.


    David Shulman is a man with formidable attainments. An Indologist, he
    is a scholar in Tamil, Telugu and Sanskrit literature and arts. He
    graduated in Islamic Studies and read Persian and Arabic. He received
    his Ph.D. in Tamil literature for his dissertation on the
    sthalapuranams of temples in Tamil Nadu. That led him to study mural
    paintings in temples in Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh. Dr. Shulman
    knows a dozen languages including Tamil, Telugu, Sanskrit, Hebrew,
    English, Russian and Persian. He has written several books including
    Tamil Temple Myths, Songs of the Harsh Devotee and The Hungry God:
    Hindu Tales of Filicide and Devotion, all published by prestigious
    U.S. universities. He is currently Professor, Department of Indian,
    Iranian and Armenian Studies, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem,
    Israel.


    Dr. Shulman was in Chennai recently to attend a conference on
    `Painting Narratives: Mural Painting Traditions in the 13th -19th
    Centuries', organised by the Madras Craft Foundation and its heritage
    museum Dakshina Chitra. Excerpts from a conversation...

    You know the sthalapuranams of many temples in Tamil Nadu and Andhra
    Pradesh. You have studied the mural paintings in temples in these two
    States. How did you get interested in sthalapuranams and mural
    paintings in temples?

    My interest in sthalapuranams goes back 37 years. I was a Ph.D.
    student at the School of Oriental and African Studies in the
    University of London under John Marr. His was a famous name in Madras
    (Chennai). He was my guru. John Marr was a student of a student of
    U.Ve. Swaminatha Iyer. In the course of looking for a Ph.D. topic for
    me, we began to talk about the fact that nobody had done any serious
    work on Tamil sthalapuranams. It was a huge literature. We know of
    about 2,000 surviving sthalapuranams in Tamil alone. Some of them are
    in manuscripts, some in printed versions. It is an enormous, rich
    literature and it had been hardly touched before. So it seemed to be
    a good topic for a Ph.D. dissertation. I studied the Tamil puranas of
    temples such as Tiruvannamalai, Nagapattinam, Rameswaram, Kumbakonam,
    Chidambaram, Kanchipuram and others.


    Responsibility to the past: Dr. David Shulman.

    I lived with my wife at Mandavelipakkam in Madras in 1975-76. I would
    wander around these temples because I needed to see them. When you
    read the sthalapuranam, you obviously need to see the temple, the
    sthalavriksha (the sacred tree), the kulam (the pond) and the
    murthis. These are highly specific to these individual places. So I
    would basically roam around the Tamil country, mostly in Thanjavur
    district and also in the south.

    In the course of my wandering, I happened to come across many
    beautiful mural paintings. In the Tamil country, among the hundreds
    of temples, many had and some still have, these beautiful murals.
    Some of them are quite old, some not so old, some going back to the
    16th century and some to the 19th century. Pieces of these mural
    paintings survive all over the Tamil country.

    I always thought that we should have a conference like this to bring
    these paintings to the attention of the public and the scholarly
    public so that people would begin to think about them, preserve and
    conserve them.


    You touched on preservation. What is your impression about the status
    of these murals in Tamil Nadu? The paintings in Tiruvellarai temple
    near Tiruchi have been whitewashed. The murals in the Jaina temple at
    Tiruparuttikkunram near Kanchipuram have been repainted to look
    dazzlingly new.

    I went to Tiruparuttikkunram on January 25, 2008. I saw the paintings
    on the ceiling. They have been destroyed by re-painting.


    Are these paintings in temples on the brink?

    It is not yet too late. But the problem is very urgent. If action is
    not taken soon, that is, immediately, these treasures of Tamil Nadu,
    which are part of the national heritage, will disappear. In some
    temples, these paintings have been preserved and they are not in such
    a bad shape. But in many places, they are on the verge of
    disappearing. Some of them have been painted over or whitewashed or
    repainted in such a way that it destroys the integrity of the old
    paintings.

    For example, I was working in Tiruvarur. There was a beautiful,
    famous 17th century set of paintings about Muchukunda Chakravarthi on
    the ceiling of Devasiriya Mandapam in the Thyagarajaswamy temple at
    Tiruvarur. This set of paintings is well known to the public and the
    scholarly world. They are masterpieces of south Indian painting. That
    ceiling in Devasiriya Mandapam is in a miserable condition. The
    Mandapam has a special place in the history of Tamil Saiva
    literature. That is the Mandapam where Sundaramurthy Nayanar had a
    vision of all the 63 Nayanmars (Tamil Saivite saints). Today, people
    are using it as a godown. It is filled with all kinds of junk, old
    logs, rusting nails and dead rodents. It is a terrible situation.

    These 17th century masterpieces have suffered from shameful neglect.
    There is now some hope that INTACH (the Indian National Trust for Art
    and Cultural Heritage) will go into action at the Tiruvarur temple
    and conserve these paintings.

    If you go there today, you will see that there is a long series of
    paintings [on the ceiling] along the window in the Mandapam. Many of
    the panel of paintings closest to the window, that I saw 30 years ago
    have now been completely lost through water damage, smoke, insects,
    birds nesting, cracking of plaster and sheer neglect. Some of these
    murals no longer exist. I want to say again that these are
    masterpieces of south Indian cultural heritage. If they are not
    conserved very soon, they will be lost.

    Yesterday, I went to Sri Varadarajaswamy temple at Kanchipuram. In
    the enclosure wall around the main shrine of Sri Varadarajaswamy,
    there are incredibly beautiful paintings of the 17th century. Again,
    they are masterpieces. They urgently need to be preserved. Preserved
    means not painted over. If they are painted over by new artists, they
    will be destroyed. Preservation means they have to be cleaned
    professionally by experts who know about these kinds of frescoes.
    They have to be carefully treated in such a way that no further
    damage will take place. If somebody wants to do some new paintings,
    there are many surfaces in all the temples in Tamil Nadu. But let
    them not paint over all these old masterpieces. That will definitely
    destroy them. That is what has happened in many places.

    That has happened at the Jaina temple at Tiruparuttikkunram near
    Kanchipuram, which is under the State Department of Archaeology?

    It definitely happened at Tiruparuttikkunram. The paintings have been
    ruined by being painted over. This is quite a common thing in Tamil
    Nadu. If you repaint it instead of conserving it, the subtlety will
    be lost, the old colours will be lost. This is disaster. These
    paintings have to be preserved as they were at their height. The way
    people do it in Europe. Frescoes in Italy, France and Germany are
    treated by professional people, whose job is to do that. For example,
    in the Sistine Chapel in Rome, which has Michelangelo's famous
    paintings, they went through a long process of cleaning, restoring
    and conserving these paintings.



    I heard you were denied entry to the thousand-pillared mandapam in
    the Thyagarajaswamy temple at Tiruvarur although it is nowhere near
    the sanctum sanctorum.

    I don't want to say much about it. We had a letter of authorisation
    from the Minister for Endowments. When we came to Tiruvarur, it was
    still very difficult to get permission to enter the mandapam. They
    eventually gave us the permission. All we needed to do was to take a
    few photographs to complete the set of existing photographs because
    we had good quality pictures taken 20 years ago. It should have been
    a simple matter and the authorisation was there. Still it was a
    rather difficult bureaucratic procedure. Although in the end we were
    allowed to take pictures. I am grateful to the temple authorities for
    that. But the process was traumatic.

    Whitewashing and sandblasting of paintings in temples is going on in
    Tamil Nadu under the name of performing kumbabhishekams. How do you
    sensitise the temple authorities not to indulge in vandalism like
    this?

    We talked about the idea of bringing some of the temples' archakas
    and administrators to a conference like this. Let them see and hear
    from experts what it (the destruction of paintings) actually means.
    They have control over these masterpieces but they don't always
    understand what this (heritage) means. They, therefore, at times too
    easily, as you said during the temple kumbhabhishekam or renovation,
    simply whitewash them away. It happened at Madurai.


    Around the wall of the `Pottramaraikulam' (the pond of the golden
    lotus) which had murals, in the Meenakshi temple?

    Across from Pottramaraikulam, there was a beautiful series of Nayaka
    paintings. I saw them years ago. They have been completely
    whitewashed away. They are completely lost. There is no way we can
    recover them...You cannot simply wipe out a wall like this. It is a
    terrible thing...

    All of us, the general public, the archakas, the temple
    administrators and so on have a special responsibility in protecting
    these murals. We have to act now before it is too late. It is already
    too late for some of the paintings. Before we lose more, there should
    be a public awareness to properly conserve the treasures of the Tamil
    paintings of the 16th, 17th, 18th and 19th centuries.

    http://www.hindu.com/mag/2008/02/10/st ories/2008021050210700.htm
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