Impian Dharmawangsa

Dharmawangsa putra pertama Pandu, bermimpi tentang seorang gadis cantik yang dililit seekor ular. Impiannya kemudian diceritakan kepada adiknya Arjuna, dan Arjuna mengatakan bahwa wanita itu benar-benar ada, bukan hanya mimpi. (Diambil dari cerita Mahabharata.)<BR> <BR> Dikiri dan kanan ada pohon tanpa daun, disebelah kiri ada seorang laki yang sedang berdiri dibawah pohon sambil mengacungkan panah,ditengah ada seorang wanita yang dililit ular, yang menghadap ke pria yang memegang panah. Dipojok kanan bawah ada seorang pria yang menghadap wanita ditengah.<BR> <BR> The Dream of Dharmawangsa<BR> This story is said to originate from the epic cycle of the Mahabharata, but it is probably an extrapolation based on the puppet show theater. Arjuna is known as a Don Juan among the Pandawas. He aims at the girls with his bow ans arrow, a symbol of his attraction. As for the girl, of giant dimensions, she is ensnared by sexual desire, represented here by the naga (dragon). The two trees have the same root, whose middle part grows in the shape of a vagina; and they are dry and leafless. The story and drawing may therefore be constructed as a modern metaphor on the theme of sexual desire and a warning against it.

Impian Dharmawangsa

Dharmawangsa putra pertama Pandu, bermimpi tentang seorang gadis cantik yang dililit seekor ular. Impiannya kemudian diceritakan kepada adiknya Arjuna, dan Arjuna mengatakan bahwa wanita itu benar-benar ada, bukan hanya mimpi. (Diambil dari cerita Mahabharata.)<BR> <BR> Dikiri dan kanan ada pohon tanpa daun, disebelah kiri ada seorang laki yang sedang berdiri dibawah pohon sambil mengacungkan panah,ditengah ada seorang wanita yang dililit ular, yang menghadap ke pria yang memegang panah. Dipojok kanan bawah ada seorang pria yang menghadap wanita ditengah.<BR> <BR> The Dream of Dharmawangsa<BR> This story is said to originate from the epic cycle of the Mahabharata, but it is probably an extrapolation based on the puppet show theater. Arjuna is known as a Don Juan among the Pandawas. He aims at the girls with his bow ans arrow, a symbol of his attraction. As for the girl, of giant dimensions, she is ensnared by sexual desire, represented here by the naga (dragon). The two trees have the same root, whose middle part grows in the shape of a vagina; and they are dry and leafless. The story and drawing may therefore be constructed as a modern metaphor on the theme of sexual desire and a warning against it.