The Kertha Gosa pavilion is an example of Balinese architecture located on the island of Bali, in the city Klungkung, Indonesia. The Kertha Gosa Pavilion at Klungkung Palace was first built in the early 18th century by Dewa Agung Gusti Sideman. The first function of the pavilion was for the court of law in 1945.[citation needed]
Kertha Gosa was repainted in the 1920s and again in the 1960s. The
people who discovered the pavilion knew there was an extensive history
behind the pavilion. The discovery of Kertha Gosa pavilion was only
known by people writing about it here or there to others outside of
Bali. The Kertha Gosa Pavilion at Klungkung has the story of Bhima
Swarga painted around the ceiling. Bhima Swarga is a Hindu epic referenced from the Mahabharata. The story at the Kertha Gosa Pavilion is not the whole Mahabharata but one small section called Bhima Swarga.
History
Kertha
Gosa means - “the place where the king meets with his ministries to
discuss questions of justice.” The story of Bhima Swarga is elaborate
and all-embracing. Bhima Swarga in Balinese
means, “Bhima goes to the abode of the gods.” Swarga literally means to
any place where the gods happen to reside, Heaven or Hell.
Bhima, the second oldest of the five Pandava brothers, is forced by his mother Kunti with the mission to rescue from Hell the souls of his earthly father Pandu, and his second mother, Madri.
After saving Pandu and Madri from Hell, Bhima must secure them for
Heaven. Throughout Bhima’s journey to Heaven and Hell he is accompanied
by his two loyal servants (the clown characters). These made up
characters are highly important to the story Bhima Swarga because the
ordinary Balinese can relate to the characters in the story Bhima Swarga
because the characters represent ordinary Bali.
Bhima’s siblings go through hell right along with Bhima to rescue
their parents. The siblings observe people being tortured for their
sins. The siblings are Arjuna, Nakula, Sahadewa, Yudisthira, and Bhima. The two clown characters whom accompany Bhima on his journey to Hell are Twalen and Mredah.
Twalen wears a black checkered loin cloth and is the helper to Bhima.
Twalen translates what is being said by Yudisthira and Kunti. Mredah
always wears red checkered loin cloths and he also helps Bhima along
with cracking a joke to lighten the mood. Bhima goes to Hell to rescue
his parents and when he arrives he finds his parents are in a huge hot
water bath. Bhima tips the bath which his parents were boiling in and
they are taken off to Heaven. The Demons did not like Bhima rescuing his
parents and allowing them to go to Heaven. Bhima then has to fight off
the Demons. Next, the Gods do not like this idea of Bhima taking his
parents from Hell to Heaven. Bhima then gets into a fight with the Gods
and Bhima dies in Heaven. The high God of all restores Bhima back to
life and gives Bhima the drink of immortality. The last scene of Bhima
Swarga shows justice, even with punishments of Hell.
Art
Use of iconography
The ceiling of Kertha Gosa is painted in a traditional Balinese style called wayang, meaning “shadow figure”. Paintings in the wayang style are related closely to shadow theatre art, relating to the Mahabharata and Ramayana stories. Wayang style paintings have been faithfully preserved that it continues today to reflect Bali’s Hindu-Javanese heritage in its traditional iconography and content. Iconography was used a lot in Bali’s culture. Iconoclasm
is used because the Balinese people wanted to represent living things
through pictures and shadows; it was prohibited to represent any living
entity.
Types of characters
Until
the early twentieth century, the wayang style was Bali’s only form of
pictorial ways. The ubud style developed after the arrival of the Dutch.
Ubud style tends to represent aspects and scenes of everyday life in
Bali. In iconographic language, color performs an important function.
Very light brown is used for flesh color of the gods. Kasar characters
can be recognized by their brownish-red flesh.
All the characters in the story of Bhima Swarga painted in the
pavilion Kertha Gosa have a symbolic meaning relating to color and
whether the characters are kasar or halus. Kasar characters are rough
and coarse, whereas halus characters are refined and flowing. For
example, the demons in the painting Bhima Swarga would be described as
kasar - rough, coarse, crude, and vulgar. A halus figure can be
described as refined and recognized by delicate hands and fingers.
Bhima, his siblings, and Kunti are all halus characters. The angle of
the head and body attitude of the characters are also important. For
example, human heads and bodies are always a straight on position, but
kasar paintings are represented in between with eyes and nose at an
angle.
Kasar characters also have big eyes, noses, and mouths. The hand
positioning of the kasar characters is upward. Kasar characters can be
monstrous looking, have skin troubles, and look masculine. Halus
characters have small eyes, noses, and mouths with almost no facial
hair. The head and face are pointed downward. The lips of a halus
character are thin and show white uniformed teeth. In paintings, the
right hand is usually active, and the left hand remains motionless. One
of Bhima’s most important features assigned to only him is his right
thumb, which ends in a very long curved nail as his weapon, this is a
magical implication.
Social hierarchy
In
the paintings, social standing can be portrayed by the hierarchical
position of the characters, the size of their body, the side on which
they are placed (left or right of the scene). In Bhima Swarga story the
statue of Siwa,
Heaven’s most prominent god, is larger and more inflicting than any
other god. Also, Bhima overpowers all other humans in the story. Bhima’s
servants Twalen and Mredah usually appear side by side, with Mredah,
Twalen’s son, placed a little below his father. Age and social class
also play a role in the placement of the five Pandawa brothers. Bhima,
since his power is strictly physical, his body must be unhindered and
ready for battle. Around Bhima’s body wrapped flowingly is a sarong of
black and white checked material that in Bali is believed to have magic
protective qualities. In Heaven, battle scenes are not bloody. Bhima as
usual is in the center of the war panels, his body is much smaller than
in hell. Bhima’s body size is proving the importance of the hierarchy,
since Bhima’s importance diminishes when he is around the gods.
The Bhima Swarga painting in the Kertha Gosa Pavilion is a moral epic,
depicting wisdom and perseverance and the ultimate virtue over vice.
Today huge audiences listen to the epic just as it was hundreds of years
ago. It is said, “He who with fervid devotion listens to a recitation
of the Mahabharata attains to high success in consequence of the merit
that becomes his through understanding even a very small portion
thereof. All the sins of that man who recites or listens to this history
with devotion are washed off.”[this quote needs a citation]
The paintings of the Bhima Swarga story (painted in the traditional
wayang style) depicted on the Kertha Gosa pavilion ceiling have a
mystery to them. The story of Bhima Swarga occupies five rows and reads
clockwise starting at the far northeastern corner of the ceiling. The
first two rows of the Bhima Swarga paintings represent Bhima’s
appearances in Hell, and the top three rows, his journey to Heaven. At
the center of the ceiling, there is a lotus surrounded by four doves,
symbolizing good fortune, enlightenment, and ultimate salvation.
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