View allAll Photos Tagged Radha

Dancers Shyam Kartik Mishra (Krishna) and Sharmila Sharma (Radha) during a musical play by Udai Mazumdar last November in Le Cazard, Lausanne, Switzerland.

 

More details here.

Radha bhabi of dihuta

The new Volvo B9R 9400XL iShift coach of Madurai Radha heads out to Madurai from Bengaluru

This brass Radha Krishna sculpture on peacock base is the piece de- resistance.The elaborate art on the peacock shaped platform give it a special appeal and is one of its kind. The loving pastimes of Radha & Krishna give a vision of another world which is eternally full of happiness.

 

Features : Raw Material : Brass

 

Specifications : B * W * H(inches) :9.40 * 3.50 * 8.50 Weight : 4.82 Kgs

 

www.yourmatchlessgifts.com

to purchase this and other similar products

 

ISKCON Mayapur, West Bengal

A beautiful Indian bronze depicting the Hindu goddess Radha,

Standing proud on a square 4 piece throne she wears leg and arm bracelets and fine neck jewelry and has her hair in a ponytail.

Her left arm is missing (broken off) from the elbow and her fingers on her right hand are lost in the mists of time.

 

Indian bronze

Hindu goddess

Height 160 mm tall

Age 18 -19 century

 

Provenance, Treasures of Wisdoms private collection.

 

Radha, in Hinduism, the gopi (milkmaid) who became the beloved of the god Krishna during that period of his life when he lived among the gopas (cowherds) of Vrindavan. Radha was the wife of another gopa but was the dearest of Krishna's consorts and his constant companion.

Buy online “Krishna aur Meera” painting created on “Acrylic on canvas” medium by famous Indian artist “Arjun Das”. A wide range of brilliant Radha Krishna paintings are available only at Indian Art Ideas. To know more visit- www.indianartideas.in/radha-krishna-paintings

 

The above image was taken on Thursday 15th March 2012 at the Chester Welshot Academy Evening. The setup this evening was two studio lighting setups, one high key and one with a darker background.

 

The Models this evening where:

 

Model: Radha Patel

Facebook: www.facebook.com/#!/Radharani.Patel

  

and

 

Model: Hazel Clarke

Facebook: www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002562087036

  

Welshot Imaging

Web: www.welshotimaging.co.uk

Facebook: www.facebook.com/welshot

 

Constant Spring Road, Kingson, Jamaica. The Market Place, Sushi

I shoot this picture in Escon Temple in Chandigarh at night.

A beautiful Indian bronze depicting the Hindu goddess Radha,

Standing proud on a square 4 piece throne she wears leg and arm bracelets and fine neck jewelry and has her hair in a ponytail.

Her left arm is missing (broken off) from the elbow and her fingers on her right hand are lost in the mists of time.

 

Indian bronze

Hindu goddess

Height 160 mm tall

Age 18 -19 century

 

Provenance, Treasures of Wisdoms private collection.

 

Radha, in Hinduism, the gopi (milkmaid) who became the beloved of the god Krishna during that period of his life when he lived among the gopas (cowherds) of Vrindavan. Radha was the wife of another gopa but was the dearest of Krishna's consorts and his constant companion.

This art work belongs with Banaras Art Gallery ,Rani Luxmi bai lane Assi Main Road Varanasi 221005 Call us at 0091-542-2310042 or 0091-9415389135, Mail us at banarasartgallery@gmail.com This is a non profit org working for development of art all this works are contemporary created by our 45 in house artist. Paintings and sculpture are the best of it’s kind .A fix rate gallery at Assi main road is first ever concept in Indian art world..9 AM to 9 PM daily….also call us for whole sale and franchise Enjoy more then 5000 art work at gallery…thanks Yogesh Agrawal

Accession Number: 1990:1114

Display Title: The reluctant Radha

Suite Name:

Media & Support: Opaque watercolor and gold on paper

Creation Date: ca. 1790-1810

Creation Place/Subject: India

State-Province: Himachal Pradesh

Court: Kulu

School: Pahari

Display Dimensions: 9 3/16 in. x 6 3/16 in. (23.3 cm x 15.7 cm)

Credit Line: Edwin Binney 3rd Collection

Label Copy:

EDWIN BINNEY 3RD GALLERYTHE CHILD KRISHNA INSTALLATION

   

In the early literature dwelling on Kirshnas love-play with the gopis, he is enamoured of all and partial to none. With the poet Jayadevas Song of the Dark Lord (Gita Govinda) at the end of the 12th century, a new literature unfolds celebrating the trials and tribulations of love between Krishna and one particular woman, Radha. Radha is older than Krishnas other playmates, but she is one of them, and she is married. This fact alone spurs volumes of theosophical debate. How could he? How could she?

   

According to the Gita Govinda, Radha is entrusted with the care of the younger man by his father on a stormy night and asked to bring Krishna through the forest to his village. En route, the two are drawn to one another by emotions stronger than her vows, his age, their purpose. They experience the divine bliss of love that leaves them both smitten.

   

This romance, like most mortal loves, does not take a smooth course, and its infinite byways have been an enduring pre-occupation in the Indus region of poets, musicians, dramatists, and painters all too familiar with loves highs and lows. Radha and Krishna become emblems of all loversthe nayika (beautiful lady, heroine) and the niyaka (eminent one, hero)

   

This image has lines of unidentified poetry on the back, conjuring the emotions of the lady who is both chaste and filled with desire. The lady is pursued by Krishna, but he cannot be trusted to be constant. His love is there for all those who can create it. And yet he pursues her relentlessly, single-mindedly. She turns her body away from him, but her head toward him, bending it almost to caress the hand on her shoulder that she would free herself from. He invites her gently toward the bed inside the pavilion.

     

Artists in the Hill States belonged to the carpenter class within the Hindu social structure. Their special interest in and architecture and furniture is evident in this painting.

  

Marks: text on the back in red (crossed out) and black

Bibliography:

Repository: The San Diego Museum of Art

A beautiful Indian bronze depicting the Hindu goddess Radha,

Standing proud on a square 4 piece throne she wears leg and arm bracelets and fine neck jewelry and has her hair in a ponytail.

Her left arm is missing (broken off) from the elbow and her fingers on her right hand are lost in the mists of time.

 

Indian bronze

Hindu goddess

Height 160 mm tall

Age 18 -19 century

 

Provenance, Treasures of Wisdoms private collection.

 

Radha, in Hinduism, the gopi (milkmaid) who became the beloved of the god Krishna during that period of his life when he lived among the gopas (cowherds) of Vrindavan. Radha was the wife of another gopa but was the dearest of Krishna's consorts and his constant companion.

Aarti before murti is brought into the mandir

-- Uw Blik van Licht. --, van Mirabai.

[in free verse]

 

Plotseling

in zicht.

Uw blik van licht

stilt alles.

 

De kwarkpot

valt op de grond.

 

Ouders en broers,

allen gebieden

ermee op te houden.

 

Dwing, zeggen ze,

dat ding uit je hart !!

Je leeft niet zoals het hoort.

 

Zegt Mira:

Wie anders dan U

kan in het duister zien,

het duister van een hart.

 

Vertaling: 白狐

 

Engelse versie:

-- Your Look Of Light --

 

On a sudden,

the sight.

Your look of light

stills all,

 

The curd-pot

falls to the ground.

 

Parents and

brothers

all call a halt.

 

Prise out, they say,

this thing from your heart.

You've lost your path.

 

Says Meera:

Who but you

can see in the dark

of a heart?

 

[On A Sudden: www.poemhunter.com/poem/in-a-sudden-3/ ]

[Your Look Of Light: www.poemhunter.com/poem/your-look-of-light/ ]

[In A Sudden: www.poetseers.org/the_poetseers/mirabai/poems/in_a_sudden/ ]

 

Photo: www.cgarena.com/gallery/2d/details/radha_krishnaczj082010...

 

Radha Shyamsundar

 

ISKCON Vrindavan

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