Mahant of Tarakeshwar Rides on an Elephant

c. 1890
Gum tempera, graphite, ink, and tin on paper

SEE IT IN PERSON

Not currently on view

In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026

View at clevelandart.orgPlan a visit ↗

Discussion

FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG

The Tarakeshwar murder case of 1873 was a public scandal in Calcutta. It concerned an affair between Elokeshi, a young wife, and the chief priest of the Shiva temple at Tarakeshwar. Having learned about the affair, her jealous husband cut Elokeshi’s throat with a fish knife on May 27, 1873. In the subsequent trial, the husband, Banerji, was sentenced to life imprisonment and the priest was fined and imprisoned for three years. Several Bengali plays and Kalighat images were inspired by this affair and depicted events that did not actually occur but were imagined by the artist. The Mahant (head priest), the adulterer, is here depicted atop an elephant, a symbol of royalty and status. While it is not known whether he actually rode an elephant, his depiction astride one indicates the Mahant’s power and affluence, setting the stage for other images of the scandalous Tarakeshwar murder of 1873.

Source ↗

Be the first to share your thoughts.

Sign in to join the discussion.

Community guidelines

More like this

Prince Amar Singh (1672–1710) Drives His Own ElephantMewar Stipple Master (Indian) — Prince Amar Singh (1672–1710Royal Elephant Ramkali with a MahoutRoyal Elephant Ramkali with a MahoutArtworkCaparisoned Elephant and HorsesCaparisoned Elephant and HorsesArtworkThe Elephant of Maharana Jai Singh of Mewar (r. 1680–98) Catches a Horse by the TailThe Elephant of Maharana Jai Singh of Mewar (r. 1680–98) CatTwo Elephants Fighting in a Courtyard Before Muhammad ShahNainsukh (Indian, 1710–1778) — Two Elephants Fighting in a CA Raja on an ElephantA Raja on an ElephantArtworkNihal ChandA prince riding a composite elephantA prince riding a composite elephantMaharao Guman Singh Riding an Elephant in ProcessionIndia Rajasthan, Kota — Maharao Guman Singh Riding an ElephaArjuna Slays Karna, page from a Mahabharata seriesNepal — Arjuna Slays Karna, page from a Mahabharata series