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Apollo
Art Diary

Tree and Serpent: Early Buddhist Art in India, 200 BCE–400 CE

14 July 2023

How did the teachings of the Buddha transform the art of ancient India? This exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York tells this tale through more than 140 objects loaned from collections worldwide (21 July–13 November). Together these trace the transformation of pre-Buddhist figurative sculpture into the art of a new religion. Highlights include stone sculptures created for stupa – monuments housing religious relics – and new discoveries from a monastic site in the Deccan, south India. Find out more on the Met’s website.

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Stupa (early 2nd century), Guntur District, Andhra Pradesh. British Museum, London

Figurine of a diety or courtesan (1st centruy CE), Western Deccan. National Archaeological Museum, Naples. Courtesy the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Figurine of a deity or courtesan (1st century), Western Deccan. National Archaeological Museum, Naples

Conch shell cornucopia (3rd–4th century CE). Archaeological Museum ASI, Nagarjunakonda, Andhra Pradesh