Krishna's Butter Ball, Mahabalipuram

Description

Mahabalipuram is a site on India’s southeastern coast where numerous rock-cut temples and sculptures were carved during the early 600s. The site includes a remarkable, naturally occurring boulder that became known popularly as Krishna’s Butter Ball, thereby merging a geological phenomenon with sacred narrative. If baby Krishna could crawl while holding this monolith as effortlessly in his hand as a ball of butter, he must be a magnificently powerful god.

Colonial-era tourists enjoy their excursion to the site with no indication that they recognized its sanctity. Photographs such as this would have been sent back to Britain for viewers to marvel at the landscape of India.

Provenance

(Pump Park Vintage Photography, Ltd., Downpatrick, United Kingdom) (?–2015); Barbara L. Tannenbaum, Beachwood, OH, given to the Cleveland Museum of Art (2015–2019); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (March 4, 2019–)

Krishna's Butter Ball, Mahabalipuram

Unidentified Photographer

c. 1900s

Accession Number

2019.68

Medium

Gelatin silver print, toned, on collodion printing-out paper

Dimensions

Image: 15.3 x 10.8 cm (6 x 4 1/4 in.); Paper: 15.3 x 10.8 cm (6 x 4 1/4 in.)

Classification

Photograph

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Barbara Tannenbaum and Mark Soppeland