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Sigiriya the Rock
The most significant feature of the Rock would have been the Lion staircase
leading to the palace garden on the summit. Based
on the ideas described in some of the graffiti, this Lion staircase could
be visualised as a gigantic figure towering majestically against the granite
cliff, facing north, bright coloured, and awe-inspiring. Through the open
mouth of the Lion had led the covered staircase built of bricks and timber
and a tiled roof. All that remains now are the two colossal paws and a
mass of brick masonry that surround the ancient limestone steps and the
cuts and groves on the rock face give an idea of the size and shape of
the lion figure.
Though traces
of plaster and pigments occur all over this area, there are only two pockets
of paintings surviving in the depressions of the rock face, about a 100
meters above the ground level. These paintings represent the earliest
surviving examples of a Sri Lanka school of classical realism, already
fully evolved by the 5th century, when these paintings had been made.
Earlier the Sigiri style had been considered as belonging to the Central
Indian school of Ajanta, but later considered as specifically different
from the Ajanta paintings. The ladies depicted in the paintings have been
variously identified as Apsaras (heavenly maidens), as ladies of Kasyapas
court and as Lightening Princess and Cloud Damsels.
There are
also remains of paintings in some of the caves at the foot of the rock.
Of special significance is the painting on the roof of the Cobra Hood
Cave. The cave with its unique shape dates from the pre-christian era.
The painting combines geometrical shapes and motifs with a free and complex
rendering of characteristic volute or whorl motifs. It is nothing less
than a masterpiece of expressionist painting
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