The varied aspects of romantic love is one of the most prominent themes in the arts of India. Authors produced treatises on the many types of lovers and their differing temperaments. Poets compiled cycles of verse likening love’s phases to the passage of the seasons. Writers compared the religious quest for unity with the divine to the pursuit of one’s beloved. Composers crafted musical arrangements to express love’s many moods. And artists created paintings to visualize these and myriad other musings on the subject of love.

This exhibition’s twenty-three paintings are assembled from VMFA’s permanent collection, and more than a third of them on display for the first time. They were created in a variety of styles by artists working at courts scattered across north, central, and western India. Rather than their formal qualities, however, this presentation explores their subject matter: love’s many facets and the wide range of emotions it can produce—from enchantment, passion, and joy to betrayal, self-pity, and anguish.


Exhibition Highlights

The Months of Shravana and Bhadra, ca. 1780, Indian, Rajasthan, Bundi, opaque watercolor and gold on paper, Adolph D. and Wilkins C. Williams FundThe Months of Shravana and Bhadra, ca. 1780, Indian, Rajasthan, Bundi, opaque watercolor and gold on paper, Adolph D. and Wilkins C. Williams Fund

A Lady after Her Bath, Holding a Lotus Bud Received from a Winged Messenger, early 19th century, Indian, Rajasthan, Jaipur, opaque watercolor and gold on paper, Friends of Indian Art and the Robert A. and Ruth W. Fisher FundA Lady after Her Bath, Holding a Lotus Bud Received from a Winged Messenger, early 19th century, Indian, Rajasthan, Jaipur, opaque watercolor and gold on paper, Friends of Indian Art and the Robert A. and Ruth W. Fisher Fund

Page from a Rasikapriya Series, Radha and Her Confidante Discuss the Absent Krishna, ca. 1660–80, Indian, Central India, Malwa, opaque watercolor and gold on paper Robert A. and Ruth W. Fisher FundPage from a Rasikapriya Series, Radha and Her Confidante Discuss the Absent Krishna, ca. 1660–80, Indian, Central India, Malwa, opaque watercolor and gold on paper Robert A. and Ruth W. Fisher Fund

Page from a Rasikapriya Series, ca. 1630-40 Indian, Central India, Malwa, opaque watercolor and gold on paper, Arthur and Margaret Glasgow EndowmentPage from a Rasikapriya Series, ca. 1630-40 Indian, Central India, Malwa, opaque watercolor and gold on paper, Arthur and Margaret Glasgow Endowment

Page from a Gita Govinda Series, Krishna and Radha Make Love, ca. 1775-80, Indian, Punjab Hills, Kangra, opaque watercolor and ink on paper, Arthur and Margaret Glasgow EndowmentPage from a Gita Govinda Series, Krishna and Radha Make Love, ca. 1775-80, Indian, Punjab Hills, Kangra, opaque watercolor and ink on paper, Arthur and Margaret Glasgow Endowment

A Heroine, Longing for Her Lover, Gazes at Mating Pigeons, ca. 1770–80, Indian, Rajasthan, Bundi, opaque watercolor and ink on paper, Nasli and Alice Heeramaneck Collection, Gift of Paul MellonA Heroine, Longing for Her Lover, Gazes at Mating Pigeons, ca. 1770–80, Indian, Rajasthan, Bundi, opaque watercolor and ink on paper, Nasli and Alice Heeramaneck Collection, Gift of Paul Mellon


The Months of Shravana and Bhadra (detail), ca. 1780, Indian, Rajasthan, Bundi, opaque watercolor and gold on paper, Adolph D. and Wilkins C. Williams Fund

A Lady after Her Bath, Holding a Lotus Bud Received from a Winged Messenger (detail), early 19th century, Indian, Rajasthan, Jaipur, opaque watercolor and gold on paper, Friends of Indian Art and the Robert A. and Ruth W. Fisher Fund

Page from a Ragamala Series, Bhairavi Ragini (detail), 18th century, Indian, Rajasthan, Bundi or Kota, opaque watercolor and ink on paper, Gift of an anonymous donor in memory of Muriel B. Christison