painted gopurams-not a new idea?
From the Bhakti List Archives
• August 10, 1999
Mani- I would like to address two issue your posting brought to mind. The first is that color use and perception are highly subjective and everyone is going to have their own reactions/feelings to different colors. I would not consider blues, greens, oranges, reds or other bright colors to be inappropriate or garish when used to decorate a gopuram - especially when they reflect the colorful dress of the temple devotees. I feel that use of vivid color (granted there is great opportunity to overdo it) adds a vibrancy and/or vitality that I miss when approaching other temples/places of worship which are simply whitewashed. The second issue that came to my mind was one of custom. While I like color, I would not just slap it on any old temple to "improve" its appearance or "make it better". To me "new and improved" does not always mean "better". I would hesitate to paint something that never was intended to be. And, that brings me to a question - weren't these temples built during a time when most temples had painted gopurams? I have read about and seen several Vaishnavite as well as Saivite temples which are and have always colorfully painted. Are we sure that the "somber " versions weren't whitewashed to conform to Muslim or Victorian British tastes/ideas of worship? Or perhaps they were merely left unattended and allowed to fade. Finally, whitewashed or painted, the saddest thing is to see unattended gopurams encrusted with bird droppings and black mildew. Purnima Koustubhan
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