A large Jain painting of a Gyan bazi
A large Jain painting of a Gyan bazi

INDIA, RAJASTHAN, 19TH CENTURY

Details
A large Jain painting of a Gyan bazi
India, Rajasthan, 19th century
The morality game depicted with black snakes traversing multiple squares filled with text and numbers and bordered in yellow, capped by a tiered gate flanked with floral vines, celestial musicians and vahanas
31¼ x 31¼ in. (79.3 x 79.3 cm.)
Provenance
Ghigo Collection, London, acquired from Sotheby's, London, 16 February 1981, lot 436

Lot Essay

Still popular today as the child's game, "Chutes and Ladders," gyan bazi was often played during the Paryusana festival and was popular amongst Jain nuns who used it as a didactic pastime to impart the notion of karma. Women of the Rajasthani courts also played the game for recreation and versions were adapted for Hindus and Muslims. Played with dice, the board represents the progress of life with certain squares denoting good deeds, and others bad deeds, along with the consequences of both actions. Starting in the lower squares representing hell, players can advance to the next square by answering questions correctly, sometimes aided by a ladder to skip squares. The snakes cause the players to lose ground where they must start again. To win players must reach the semi-circle at top, representing moksha. See J. van Alphen, Steps to Liberation, 2000, p. 126 and S. Andhare in The Peaceful Liberators: Jain Art from India, 1994.

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