Beyond Bollywood: 2000 Years of Dance in Art at the Asian Art Museum

 

The Buddhist deity Vajravarahi, approx. 1300–1400. Tibet. Bronze with gilding and inlaid turquoise. H. 36 cm (overall). Cleveland Museum of Art, Leonard C. Hanna, Jr. Fund, 1982.50.

 
 
 

Beyond Bollywood

2000 Years of Dance in Art

 

March 31, 2023 — July 10, 2023

 

A journey for the mind, body, and senses through two millennia of art inspired by dance from South and Southeast Asia and the Himalayas.

Dance is everywhere in the arts of the Indian cultural sphere: from the sacred dance of a god bringing the world into being to the elaborate choreography of modern Bollywood, every move has meaning. From March 31 through July 10, 2023, the Asian Art Museum presents Beyond Bollywood: 2000 Years of Dance in Art, inviting all to discover the power of dance in the visual arts of India, Southeast Asia, and the Himalayas, where dancing plays a significant role in religion, mythology, and ceremony.

Featuring more than 120 artworks borrowed from 20 of the finest museums and private collections, Beyond Bollywood immerses museumgoers in a multimedia showcase of dance, bringing a wide array of historic and contemporary sculpture, painting, textiles, jewelry, photographs, and more to vivid, passionate life. Through encounters with artworks from countries including India, Pakistan, Nepal, Tibet, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, and Indonesia, Beyond Bollywood reveals the enduring capacity of dance to inspire a diverse range of artists and audiences alike. “We hope visitors will come away with a transformed notion of the importance and power of dance,” says co-curator Forrest McGill, “what it has meant in the past, and what it can mean in their own lives today.”

The exhibition’s design takes full advantage of the theatrical and technical capabilities of the museum’s new Akiko Yamazaki and Jerry Yang Pavilion, incorporating experiential elements from subtle musical backdrops to gallery-spanning video installations. Several live dance performances will take place within the main pavilion itself; through these and numerous other associated dance events and programs, viewers can experience the magic of dance in person.

Beyond Bollywood is organized by the Asian Art Museum and the Cincinatti Art Museum and co-curated by Wattis Senior Curator of South and Southeast Asian Art Forrest McGill and Ainsley M. Cameron, curator of South Asian Art, Islamic Art and Antiquities at the Cincinnati Art Museum. An exhibition catalog published by the Asian Art Museum includes essays by McGill, Cameron, Laura Weinstein, Padma Kaimal, and Esha Niyogi De.

 
 

Exhibition Preview

 

The poet-saint Sambandar. 1200–1400. India; Tamil Nadu state. Bronze. H. 61.6 cm × W. 35.6 cm. Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, The Avery Brundage Collection, B60B1016

Grotesque dancers performing. Approx. 1600. India; Mughal period (1526–1857) Gum tempera, ink, and gold on paper H. 16 × W. 9 cm (image). Cleveland Museum of Art, Andrew R. and Martha Holden Jennings Fund, 1971.88

Nautch with Three Dancers, approx. 1862 (printed later), by Shepherd & Robertson (British, active 1862–1863). Albumen silver print. H. 22.9 cm x W. 27.9 cm. Collection of Catherine Glynn Benkaim and Barbara Timmer.

Comb with depiction of dancing woman, approx. 1600–1700. Sri Lanka; former kingdom of Kandy. Ivory with traces of pigment. H. 14 cm x W. 8.3 cm. Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, The Avery Brundage Collection, B60M345. Photography © Asian Art Museum of San Francisco.

Twenty-armed dancing Ganesha. Approx. 900–1000. India; Madhya Pradesh state Sandstone. H. 67.6 cm × W. 42 cm. Art Institute of Chicago, promised gift of James W. and Marilynn Alsdorf, 169.1997

Strut with dancing Bhairava. Approx. 1700. Nepal; Kathmandu Valley. Wood with traces of pigments. H. 72.4 cm × W. 45.7 cm × D. 17.8 cm. Walters Art Museum, F.167

Hanging with celestial beings dancing and playing music. Approx. 1650–1675. India; Machilipatnam, Andhra Pradesh state. Cotton plain-weave, mordant- and resist-dyed, with painting. H. 67.3 cm × W. 82.5 cm. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Gift of John Goelet, 66.230

Plaque depicting dancer. Approx. 1600–1700. India; Madurai, Tamil Nadu state Ivory. H. 14.6 cm × W. 9.8 cm. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Purchased with funds provided by The Smart Family Foundation through the generosity of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar G. Richards, M.88.66

Shiva and Parvati on the bull Nandi, with dancers and musicians. 956. India; Harshagiri, Rajasthan state Sandstone. H. 45.7 cm × W. 85.7 cm. The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, William Rockhill Nelson Trust, 35-304

Dancing Hevajra surrounded by dancing yoginis, probably 1050–1100. Northeastern Thailand; former kingdom of Angkor. Bronze. H. 46 cm x D. 23.9 cm. Cleveland Museum of Art, gift of Maxeen and John Flower in honor of Dr. Stanislaw Czuma, 2011.143.

The Lords of the Cremation Ground dancing, approx. 1400–1500. Tibet. Pigments and gold on cotton. H. 45.09 cm x W. 36.2 cm. Gift of Shelley & Donald Rubin Foundation, F1996.16.5.

Dancing Ganesha, approx. 1500–1700. India; Karnataka state. Copper alloy. H. 50.5 cm x W. 33 cm. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Purchased with funds provided by Harry and Yvonne Lenart, M.86.126.

The Buddhist deity Kurukulla. 1500–1600. Tibet. Distemper on cotton, mounted on silk brocade. H. 40 cm × W. 32.4 cm. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Gift of John Goelet, 67.819

The Buddhist deity Vajravarahi. Approx. 1400–1500. Tibet; probably Densatil Monastery Copper alloy with gilding, gemstones, and traces of paint. H. 28.6 cm × W. 24.8 cm. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Purchased by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art Board of Trustees in honor of Dr. Pratapaditya Pal, Senior Curator of Indian and Southeast Asian Art, 1970–95, AC1996.4.1

Dancing villagers, approx. 1730. Attributed to Pandit Seu (Indian, 1680–1740). Opaque watercolors on paper. H. 24.8 cm x W. 36.2 cm (image); H. 27.3 cm x W. 38.7 cm (sheet). Los Angeles County Museum of Art, from the Nasli and Alice Heeramaneck Collection, Museum Associates Purchase, M.77.19.24.

Bust of Hevajra, late 12th–early 13th century. Cambodia. Stone. Metropolitan Museum of Art, Fletcher Fund, 1936, 36.96.4.

The temptation of the Buddha by the demon Mara’s daughters. 1561. Nepal. Distemper on cotton. H. 108.5 cm × W. 75.5 cm. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, gift of John Goelet, 67.846

Mythical bird-man and bird-woman dancing, approx. 1857–1885. Myanmar (Burma). Wood with lacquer, gold leaf, and inlaid glass. H. 143.5 cm x W. 57.5 cm (bird-man); H. 97 cm x W. 36 cm (bird-woman). Burma Art Collection at Northern Illinois University, gift of Konrad and Sarah Bekker, BC87.01.01 and BC87.01.02.

Mythical bird-man and bird-woman dancing, approx. 1857–1885. Myanmar (Burma). Wood with lacquer, gold leaf, and inlaid glass. H. 143.5 cm x W. 57.5 cm (bird-man); H. 97 cm x W. 36 cm (bird-woman). Burma Art Collection at Northern Illinois University, gift of Konrad and Sarah Bekker, BC87.01.01 and BC87.01.02.

Frieze with celestial dancers. Approx. 1180–1220. Cambodia; Bayon Temple, Angkor Sandstone. H. 25.4 cm × W. 87.6 cm. Cleveland Museum of Art, Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund, 1938.433

Dancer and musicians. Approx. 973. India; Harshagiri, Rajasthan state Sandstone. H. 33.3 cm × W. 95.2 cm. Cleveland Museum of Art, John L. Severance Fund, 1969.34

Shiva as slayer of the elephant demon. Approx. 1000–1100. India; Tamil Nadu state. Granite. H. 72.4 cm × W. 48.3 cm × D. 20.3 cm. Cleveland Museum of Art, John L. Severance Fund, 1962.164