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Ganesha, hand-carved in Rajasthan

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  • PaulinKendal
    SMF Supporters
    • Jul 2021
    • 1636
    • Paul
    • Kendal

    #1

    Ganesha, hand-carved in Rajasthan

    I got this wooden statue on a trip to India earlier this year, and was inspired to paint him by the many painted wooden icons I saw while I was there.

    This proved very easy to paint - nice and big, not much shading required, and the slightly rough detail of the wood carving made precision unnecessary. So a perfect reintroduction to painting after several months' layoff.

    Some might quibble over whether this should be listed under 'Fantasy' or 'Pre WW1' but I'm atheist, so for me he's strictly a figment of the collective human imagination - no offence intended.

    (The original wood carving and progress pictures are in figure-related chat, not the 'under construction' section.)

    Click image for larger version

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  • Stefee
    SMF Supporters
    • Feb 2023
    • 1018
    • Stefan
    • Hemel Hempstead

    #2
    Superbly done and a very unusual subject.

    Comment

    • Steven000
      • Aug 2018
      • 2899
      • Steven
      • Belgium

      #3
      Nice paintwork Paul, cheers

      Comment

      • Tim Marlow
        SMF Supporters
        • Apr 2018
        • 19108
        • Tim
        • Somerset UK

        #4
        Love it. Great choice of colours and tones. Great stuff Paul, glad you are back on the horse 👍

        Comment

        • Jim R
          SMF Supporters
          • Apr 2018
          • 16211
          • Jim
          • Shropshire

          #5
          That's a real eye catcher. Very unusual subject, great choice of colours and skillfully painted.

          Comment

          • Airborne01
            • Mar 2021
            • 4307
            • Steve
            • Essex

            #6
            A beauty! Definitely on to be proud of Paul - bet it looks superb on the book shelves!
            Steve

            Comment

            • PaulinKendal
              SMF Supporters
              • Jul 2021
              • 1636
              • Paul
              • Kendal

              #7
              Gents, you're all very kind.

              Airborne01 - Ganesha is the Remover of Obstacles, and his statue is often placed at the home doorway, supposedly bringing peace, positivity and wisdom to the household. As we're in the process of moving house, he'll be positioned facing the main entrance to our new home.

              But he looks fine on a bookshelf, too!

              Comment

              • PaulTRose
                • Jun 2013
                • 7123
                • Paul
                • Tattooine

                #8
                Wow i did not expect it to look that good...... Thats really nice work

                Id love to know what someone from india thinks of it
                Per Ardua

                We'll ride the spiral to the end and may just go where no ones been

                Comment

                • Jim R
                  SMF Supporters
                  • Apr 2018
                  • 16211
                  • Jim
                  • Shropshire

                  #9
                  Just looked again at this on the big screen of my desktop monitor. Are they mice or rats? It looks like Ganesha has his trunk on a pile of nuts and the little mouse/rat is looking longingly at the food 😁
                  Even blown up on the big screen your skills are very apparent, super work.

                  Comment

                  • flyjoe180
                    SMF Supporters
                    • Jan 2012
                    • 12972
                    • Joe
                    • Earth

                    #10
                    Beautiful paint work Paul, very nicely done

                    Comment

                    • PaulinKendal
                      SMF Supporters
                      • Jul 2021
                      • 1636
                      • Paul
                      • Kendal

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Jim R
                      Just looked again at this on the big screen of my desktop monitor. Are they mice or rats? It looks like Ganesha has his trunk on a pile of nuts and the little mouse/rat is looking longingly at the food 😁
                      Even blown up on the big screen your skills are very apparent, super work.
                      The rodents are nominally rats. Ganesha has been around for about 2,000 years, so he's become associated with a massive array of signs and symbols, and the rats are just one of them. They've been mice or shrews in past incarnations, and these particular carvings look like three stripe indian palm squirrels to me (we saw loads of them in India). So I painted them as that - but I only gave them two stripes, for no good reason, tbh.

                      The pile of nuts are a pile of Indian sweets, which Ganesha is very fond of (hence the big belly).

                      What's he got in his other hands? On one he has the symbol 'Om' painted. The other two could be holding an axe, a noose, a conch shell, a goad, a spray of rice, a lute, a thunderbolt, a lotus flower, and on and on (and on).

                      I couldn't decide what they looked like so I've just painted them as gilded symbolic versions of whatever they are actually supposed to be, and hoped for the best.

                      Hinduism seems to me to be an amazingly inclusive religion - I was amazed to discover that Hinduism had incorporated both Jesus and Mohammed into their pantheon of gods, and that it even had a branch that is atheist! How does THAT work?!

                      Whatever, the relaxed nature of Hinduism (compared to my strict Catholic upbringing, anyway) makes me confident my interpretation of the statue would be well-received by the faithful.

                      Comment

                      • PaulinKendal
                        SMF Supporters
                        • Jul 2021
                        • 1636
                        • Paul
                        • Kendal

                        #12
                        Oh, and his beads are painted in the colours of the Indian tricolour - saffron (for Hinduism), green (for Islam), and white (for peace), which is rather nice, isn't it?

                        Comment

                        • Jim R
                          SMF Supporters
                          • Apr 2018
                          • 16211
                          • Jim
                          • Shropshire

                          #13
                          That's very interesting. Thanks Paul.

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