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Guru Har Gobind Miniature Painting on Paper - Handmade Indian Sikh Religious Artwork - Perfect for Home Decor, Spiritual Gifts & Cultural Collections
Guru Har Gobind Miniature Painting on Paper - Handmade Indian Sikh Religious Artwork - Perfect for Home Decor, Spiritual Gifts & Cultural Collections
Guru Har Gobind Miniature Painting on Paper - Handmade Indian Sikh Religious Artwork - Perfect for Home Decor, Spiritual Gifts & Cultural Collections
Sku: 46149136 in stock
$74.25
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Dimensions: 7.0 inches X 9.5 inches Sikh Art & Paintings | Pictures of Guru Gobind Singh & Guru NanakMiniature Painting on PaperThis excellently executed portrait of Guru Har Gobind speaks of the mid-nineteenth century Sikh art of Patiala in Punjab where during the period of Maharaja Narender Singh great many excellent Sikh miniatures were rendered by the Patiala court artists. Maharaja Narender Singh had great artistic tastes that manifested extensively in various frescoes rendered under his instructions and in the construction of Shish Mahal, the mirror-palace, which he built in 1847. The set of portraits of ten Sikh Gurus executed under the patronage of Maharaja Narender Singh and some other miniatures are outstanding in their artistic merit. This portrait is the truest and the most characteristic representation of Guru Har Gobind. Guru Har Gobind, the sixth of Sikh Gurus, combined in his personality a saint, sportsman and a soldier. His father Guru Arjan Dev was a true saint but the boy Har Gobind had perceived his father's saintliness suffer and erode at the brutal hands of Mughal tyranny. When yet a little more than a child Guru Har Gobind was convinced that for sustaining the Panth sword was as essential as sainthood. He hence advocated that a Sikh Guru would represent both the Miri and Piri, the Shakti and Bhakti and the Tegh and Degh. He decided to wear on his waist two swords instead of one, that is, one to chastise the oppressor and the other to protect the innocent. ", He declared that the Guru's house would henceforth combine the spiritual and the mundane powers, his rosary would serve also as his sword-belt and an emblem of regality would crown his turban. He would sit in a regular court with regalia around. Sikhs were commanded to keep a sword and maintain a horse. The aureole of Guru Nanak's Sikhism and the humming melodies of his sangats had with Guru Har Gobind combined with th
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