Vaishnava Devotee with Two Women, 1800s. Here a devotee of Vishnu is wearing shoes and is depicted with some irony as being a fashionable devotee, or perhaps merely posing as orthodox. Kalighat artists often targeted hypocritical Vaishnava mendicants whose intentions with unsuspecting women were far from innocent. On his forehead one finds sectarian marks worn by worshippers of Vishnu. The man’s right hand and one of the women’s left hands, both held aloft, are coloured red, possibly to indicate that they were adorned with henna.


Size: 4316px × 5503px
Photo credit: © Heritage Art/Heritage Images / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: 19th, art, black, calcutta, century, cleveland, graphite, heritage, india, ink, kalighat, museum, paint, painting, paper, tin, underdrawing, unknown, watercolour