Kanphata yogini with her disciples, anonymous, c. 1650 - 1699

Kanphata yogini with her disciples, anonymous, c. 1650 - 1699

brush, h 185mm × w 143mm More details

Depictions of Hindu female ascetics (yoginis) with topknots and ash-smeared skin emerged around 1600 in south-central India. They have been interpreted in various, often metaphorical, ways. In real life, yoginis were actually rare. While religion offered a way for all genders to escape strict social conventions, female ascetics challenged the cultural norms even more than their male counterparts.