Al suscribirse, recibirá nuestros boletines por correo electrónico y actualizaciones de productos, no más de dos veces al mes. Todos los correos electrónicos se enviarán por Exotic India Pvt Ltd utilizando la dirección de correo electrónico info@exoticindia.com.

Por favor, lea nuestra Política de Privacidad para más detalles.
|6

Viendo del 391 de 1034      Anterior | Siguiente

POPULAR INDIAN ART (Raja Ravi Varma and The Printed Gods of India)

POPULAR INDIAN ART (Raja Ravi Varma and The Printed Gods of India)






Especificaciones
Código del Artículo: IDD593

por ERWIN NEUMAYER and CHRISTINE SCHELBERGER

Hardcover (Edición: 2003)

Oxford University Press
ISBN 0195658728

Tamaño: 12" X 9"
Páginas: 182(color Illus: 173)
Precio: $95.00   Envío Gratis - 4 to 6 days
Vistos veces desde el 3rd Apr, 2010
Descripción
About the Book:

This lavishly illustrated book traces the evolution of printing oleographs (display prints) in India, beginning with the establishment of the Ravi Varma Fine Arts Lithographic Press in Mumbai at the end of the nineteenth century. The authors assemble a large number of popular Indian prints from their rare and extensive collection, the only one of its kind available for this period.

Raja Ravi Varma Koil Tampuran (1848-1906), and aristocrat from Travancore by birth and a renowned artist, almost single-handedly created a revolution in modern Indian aesthetics with the establishment of the Ravi Varma Press. His paintings of gods and goddesses, epic heroes and heroines, virtually defined the new pan-Indian iconography. Using German printers and high-speed steam driven presses. Ravi Varma published millions of copies of these famous paintings as well as other religious icons. The pictures were also used to advertise goods and services, as indeed, for political propaganda, where heroes, gods, and national leaders merged into each other. The prints became the most influential medium of visual communication in what was then a socially and culturally fragmented Indian society.

Art historians of the early twentieth century discarded this oleographic 'art' as another school of hybrid kitsch which made a travesty of Indian aesthetic and spiritual values. This of course did not affect its popularity, since it had given Indian mythology a form that had become entrenched in the nation's subconscious. Today, 'calendar art', subconscious. Today, 'calendar-art' 'filmi' advertisements, and political propaganda, bedeck the urban Indian landscape - all a result of the Industrialization of the Indian Image.

Sociologists and art historians have only recently begun to take a new look at the origins of this popular medium, against the backdrop of the use of this art by political parties for canvassing votes, as well as the film industry.

About the Author:

Erwin Neumayer is an archaeologist working on the prehistoric art of South Asia on which he has written several books.

Christine Schelberger is an artist; she teaches art and art history in Vienna.

CONTENTS

Introduction
  1. The Magic Stone

  2. The Printed Gods of India

  3. Raja Ravi Varma

  4. The Industrialization of Gods

  5. Printing for Independence

  6. The Beauty and the Censor

  7. Matchsticks, Fireworks, and Icons
Plates

Glossary

Bibliography

List of Plates

Viendo del 391 de 1034      Anterior | Siguiente
Comentarios de los Clientes
Publicar un comentario
 
 

Revisión Post
Mi Galería
Puede seguir añadiendo elementos que te gusta a esta galería como una lista de deseos. Si Ingresar que recordará su galería para su reutilización futura.
Borrar | Añadir a Cesta
Ingresar | Registro para guardarlo en su galería
Artículos relacionados
We accept PayPal  VISA  MasterCard  Discover  American Express
Site Powered by www.unlimitedfx.com