Navaneeta Krishna or Krishna eating butter is one of the most endearing depictions of the great Lord’s Baalyakala (childhood) in the Tanjore artworks. Seated on a royal throne in the warming manner of a mischievous toddler who is enjoying being cajoled for having his favorite food, Sri Krishna in such Tanjore paintings is accompanied by a large pot filled with butter and holds a morsel of it in his hand.
Pleasing in their subject and aesthetic in the telling of Krishna’s Lila, Navaneeta Krishna Tanjore's painting is one of the favorite themes of artists and devotees. This Butter Krishna Tanjore art adds a unique touch to the traditional Navaneeta Krishna image, by placing the icon within a glistening heart-shaped ornate South Indian pendant, making the frame fittingly brilliant for the divinity it encases.
The elaborately made gold pendant in the Navaneeta Krishna Tanjore painting is sheathed with gold on its top where two parrots with their necks and tail feather curving are seated, on the round beads attached to them and on the miniature gold trinkets hanging from the frame. The floor of Sri Krishna’s palace is covered in plain chocolate brown tiles which are matched by the silk rug laid on the golden throne.
Relaxing against a faint blue colored silk masnad (bolster pillow) the youthful countenance of Bal-Krishna (baby Krishna) contrasting with his toddler physique is a distinctive characteristic of Tanjore artworks, which always depict divinities with mature facial features. Krishna wears the quintessential South Indian style hairdo with a multitude of ornaments along with other rich jewelry which has been highlighted by the artist using gold and pieces of cut and polished colorful glass and stone.
The enchanting eyes of Krishna meet our gaze halfway, as he takes a piece of butter in his hand, reclining luxuriously. Two female attendants- one with a parrot and butter other with a lotus and her hand on the pot attempt to entertain Krishna, while he finishes a hearty meal. Drawn against a red background with green draperies, (the traditional colors of Tanjore painting) with an exquisite innovation of the pendant in the iconography, this Navaneeta Krishna Tanjore painting is the aesthetic balance of convention and novelty.
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