Lessons in Color: Divine Visions and a Material History of Indian Painting

Attributed to Kripal, page from a Rasamanjari series: Chitra Darshana Nayika (The Heroine Who Gazes at a Picture of Her Absent Beloved), 1660–70. Opaque watercolor, gold, silver, and beetle wing on paper. Ross-Coomaraswamy Collection.

Date and Time

May 17, 2026
02:00PM - 03:00PM EDT

Location

Harry and Mildred Remis Auditorium (Auditorium 161), Museum of Fine Arts Boston

Speaker: Jinah Kim, George P. Bickford Professor of Indian and South Asian Art, Department of History of Art & Architecture, Harvard University 

How blue is Krishna? The Hindu god Krishna is most often depicted blue today, but in pre-modern Indian art his color varied considerably across periods and regions. In this lecture, discover the important role artists played—alongside the divine visions extoled in scriptures and the poetic, at times ecstatic, eulogies of devotees—in shaping how the deity was seen in specific historical contexts. Look carefully at the physical materials used in jewel-like courtly paintings to trace the innovations and interventions in “coloring the divine” employed by once-known artists in India.

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