Anekāntavāda Through Paintings

Published: 14.07.2015

AUM AIM AUM
Jain Paintings

A thought that comes on a person's mind and is externalised into speech or utterance it stays there in the form or shape of an image as a picture. This image or picture is rather unsubstantial as long as it stays in the depth of the mind. As it gradually surfaces and resurfaces it is. then, externalised and concretised in some recognisable form, as speech. Thus, it logically follows, 'imaging' precedes 'materialising' or 'externalising' or 'objectifying'. It is the quality of the mind that should be regarded as a mark of excellence when the image is transferred into 'speech'. So image making is a common feature with us and in this sense we are all artists. Now, mere objectifying is not the whole truth. A true artist must bring his understanding of the subject matter into an accountable way and add to it the colour of imagination. This capability, generally speaking, is an essential mark of a true artist, so much so that he, as an artist, develops the power to make the intelligent viewers happy. In fact, painting like love and music, has the power to make man happy. It is the interaction, between the painter and the viewer, that is the highest reward a painter can think of.


When it comes to considering the interaction among thought, language and painting, we should at once take note of the fact that in terms of the Jain philosophy the process of thinking is known as anekānta-drsti and that the manner and way of definitively expressing it through a comprehensible medium is generally called syādvāda. In terms of anekāntavāda, every phenomenon contains duality in it, so painting as a form of fine art cannot escape this duality or, for that matter, the concept of non-absolutism. A painter, who for instance, is engaged in giving shape to an abstract idea or even a concrete matter, must also show the duality inherent in it, if he is to give it a touch of inclusive completeness. (The ultimate truth with which he is concerned through the medium of painting can be arrived at through the stepping-stones of duality that must remain implicit in his subject matter.)

Title: Anekāntavāda Through Paintings
Author: Dr. Manju Nahata
Edition: 2012, 1st.
Publisher: Surendra Nahata
Design & Execution: Sandip & Rajib,
Distributor: Motilal Banarsidass
Language: English
Pages: 175, paintings in full colour
Dimensions: 220 x 290 x 18 mm
Weight: 990 g

References

References are pages on which this term or individual has been marked. Select the list of references sorted by 'latest' (found on a page), 'alphabetical' or 'most used' (most frequent occurrence on a page).

Share this page on:
Page glossary
Some texts contain  footnotes  and  glossary  entries. To distinguish between them, the links have different colors.
  1. Anekāntavāda
  2. Aum
  3. Jain Paintings
  4. Jain Philosophy
  5. Manju Nahata
  6. Motilal Banarsidass
  7. Non-absolutism
  8. Surendra Nahata
  9. Syādvāda
Page statistics
This page has been viewed 1794 times.
© 1997-2024 HereNow4U, Version 4.56
Home
About
Contact us
Disclaimer
Social Networking

HN4U Deutsche Version
Today's Counter: