Cover for a Box Decorated with Shiva, Vishnu, Krishna, and Ganesha

Cleveland Museum of Art

Cover for a Box Decorated with Shiva, Vishnu, Krishna, and Ganesha

Date
c. 1800
Medium
gold with enamel
Culture
Northwestern India, Rajasthan, Rajput Kingdom of Jaipur
Department
Indian and Southeast Asian Art
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

This box is covered in a variety of birds, animals, and plants. The central motifs on the lids include images of four Hindu gods: Shiva, Krishna, Vishnu, and Ganesha. The blue figures are Vishnu and Krishna, the latter of which is an incarnation of the former who is shown playing a flute. The elephant-headed Ganesha is red and accompanied by his mount, the bandicoot rat Dinka. The four-armed Shiva is paired with two animals, including a tiger and his sacred bull mount Nandi. Small enamel boxes could be used to house many different substances, from cosmetics to spices to stimulants, including opium and paan , a digestive typically given at formal gatherings as a sign of the host’s hospitality. Ganesha’s mount is the rat by his left knee.

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