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Sri
Lanka - Sigirya
Sigirya
was built by King Kasyapa sometime during the late 5th Century
AD. Although there are several renditions of how Sigirya came
to be, most versions agree that Kasyapa was in some way responsible
for the death of his Father, King Dhatusena. Shortly after the
death of his Father, Kasyapa set about building a palace on the
summit of Sigirya.
When
I asked Asala why anyone would want to build a palace so difficult
to get to, he responded that "Kasyapa had a lot of enemies."
I
thought to myself what a curse, to be so powerful that you could
have a palace build on top of a mountain but have so many enemies
that you had to isolate yourself there. Well, maybe it wasn't
that bad.
There
is no consensus as to the identity of the women depicted in the
Sigiriya frescoes. The Sri Lankan art historian Ananda K. Coomeraswamy
postulated that they may have been "asparas," similar
to angels, because the figures were cut off at their waists by
clouds, conversely, the British colonial educationist E.B. Havell
believed them to be royal ladies, Kasyapa's hand-maidens and queens.
Personally,
I like the theory espoused by the Sri Lankan historian Martin
Wickeramasinghe, who believed that they were royal women playing
water sports and that the clouds were actually sea waves. In any
debate about the meaning of art, I like the idea that the truth
somehow involves topless women playing sports.
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