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The Gupta sculptures not only remained models of Indian art for all time to come but also served as ideals for sculptures in regions beyond the boundaries of present-day India. Substantiate.
The foundation of the Gupta Empire in the 4th century A.D. marks the beginning of the classical phase of sculpture in the Indian subcontinent. In the Gupta period, all the trends and tendencies of the artistic pursuits of the preceding phases reached their culmination. Gupta sculpture is the logicalRead more
The foundation of the Gupta Empire in the 4th century A.D. marks the beginning of the classical phase of sculpture in the Indian subcontinent. In the Gupta period, all the trends and tendencies of the artistic pursuits of the preceding phases reached their culmination. Gupta sculpture is the logical outcome of the early classical sculpture of Amaravati and Mathura. In the Gupta period, sculptures made an attempt to establish a closer harmony between art and thought, between the outer and inner intellectual and spiritual conception of the people making it models of Indian art for the following centuries:
By approximately 380 AD, the Gupta empire had expanded to include a number of smaller kingdoms to the east (into what is now Myanmar), all territories north to the Himalayas (including Nepal), and the entire Indus Valley region to the west. Thus, sculptures of the Gupta period also served as ideas for sculptures beyond the boundaries of present-day India :
The Gupta Sculptural era symbolizes a tradition where techniques of art were perfected, definite types were evolved, and ideals of beauty were formulated with precision. There was no more groping in the dark, no more experimentation. A highly developed aesthetic sense and masterly execution by skilled hands produced those remarkable images that were the ideal of the artists of subsequent ages in as well as beyond India.
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