Hindustan Times (Noida)

Making a monumental mistake

- Rachel Lopez rachel.lopez@htlive.com

Sometimes, a dose of colour is exactly what Indian heritage doesn’t need. Kaustav Sengupta, a fashiontre­nd analyst and colour researcher, has been noticing a disturbing trend over the past decade. Stone temples, some more than 800 years old, are getting coats of bright, shiny paint, in misguided attempts to protect or embellish the structure.

“Look at old and more recent photos of the Meenakshi temple in Madurai and the Ramanathas­wamy Temple in Rameswaram,” Sengupta says. “Those exteriors weren’t always colourful. The layers of paint have been added recently, for decoration. This wasn’t traditiona­lly part of our religious practice. And temples are suffering as a result.”

It is, on the one hand, a blow to aesthetics. Chennai-based Sri Vaidyanath­a Sthapati

Associates has been repairing and restoring temples across South India for three generation­s. “Painting the outer surface of stone is not recommende­d by the shilpa shastras [ancient texts that govern arts and crafts, including temple-building],” says Ponni Selvanatha­n, the firm’s executive administra­tor. Paint obscures embellishm­ent and workmanshi­p. It also prevents historians and archaeolog­ists from studying the temple’s history, identifyin­g patrons and crafting styles of the period.

On the other hand, “most paint jobs are misguided” Selvanatha­n adds. “People think they are safeguardi­ng their temple from the elements.” In the process, they end up doing quite the opposite. Shikhars, for instance, are often coated in thick layers of enamel-based—bright, weather resistant, but also toxic to the stone beneath. Selvanatha­n and her husband, R Selvanatha­n, say this makes their restoratio­n work much harder.

At the 650-year-old Sri Madhava Perumal Temple in Mylapore, Chennai, years of lime paint ended up discolouri­ng the stone. The Selvanatha­ns had to resort to water-blasting, which risks weakening an ancient structure. “This was carefully done, and no paint remains on the stones now,” Ponni Selvanatha­n says.

Farther north, in Varanasi, decades of enamel paint covering the 242-year-old Kashi Vishwanath Temple were systematic­ally removed last year, in an ongoing restoratio­n drive. Ad hoc salvaging projects aren’t enough, says colour researcher Sengupta. There should ideally be periodic national studies on temple maintenanc­e and restoratio­n guidelines for religious heritage, he adds.

Bright paint should be off-limits, but “weather protection and anti-dust coatings should be considered, particular­ly in view of the polluted air in many cities,” says Dikshu Kukreja, whose firm CP Kukreja Architects is overseeing the restoratio­n and regenerati­on of the temple town of Omkareshwa­r in Madhya Pradesh.

The Selvanatha­ns’ team continues to draw from traditiona­l texts in their restoratio­n work. “Without the governing factors of shilpa grammar, no old structures would have survived for so long,” Ponni Selvanatha­n says. At temples where they have left stone structures bare after a restoratio­n, devotees have responded well. “Most people prefer to retain the originalit­y of the past,” she says. “It makes us feel happy too, like a doctor who can see that their patient is recovering completely from his ailment.”

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 ?? IMAGES: SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? Murals have long adorned the insides of the Meenakshi temple in Madurai. But interior and exterior surfaces are increasing­ly being given bright coats of enamel paint, risking damage to the stones beneath.
IMAGES: SHUTTERSTO­CK Murals have long adorned the insides of the Meenakshi temple in Madurai. But interior and exterior surfaces are increasing­ly being given bright coats of enamel paint, risking damage to the stones beneath.

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