Search results for: 'Story of bengal art part 1'
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JournalThe Poet (Head of Rabindranath Tagore) by Ramkinkar Baij$1.00Ramkinkar Baij is rightfully described as India’s first modernist sculptor for his pathbreaking use of cement and laterite as material, his choice of subjects and scale in public art projects, and his unconventional development of ideas.
The Poet is an abstract portrait of Rabindranath Tagore, imagined through negative spaces, concaves and convexes forming the eyes in a hollowed head, a masterclass in Baij’s cubist vocabulary. The portrait shared almost no physical attributes with the subject, instead focusing on distorting Tagore’s visage to give us insights into the state of his mind.
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JournalThe Last Effort and Fall of Tippoo Sultaun by Henry Singleton$1.00Henry Singleton’s The Last Effort and Fall of Tippoo Sultaun belongs to a genre known as history painting: the depiction of important historical events, usually on a large scale, as if they were playing out in front of one’s eyes. Author and parliamentarian Shashi Tharoor and art historian Giles Tillotson explain the lively imagination deployed in Singleton’s painting that depicts the British assault on Seringapatam and the killing of its ruler, Tipu Sultan—himself the source of so many stories that it was difficult to unravel the truth from the many falsities spun by the biased colonial administration and historians of the time.
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Teaching Through ArtTipoo: The man and the myth$1.00A creative response guide on exploring multiple historical perspectives through artworks and archival material on the fall of Tipoo Sultan.
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Teaching Through ArtFables of Freedom$1.00A project idea on using artworks as prompts to write about the figures in the freedom movement marginalized in or left out of the history books.
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JournalBangladesh War by Chittaprosad$1.00Chittaprosad couldn’t have created a more germane work in honour of the people who successfully fought their oppressors to create an independent nation. A close examination of his masterpiece, Bangladesh War, reveals the artist’s use of symbols of hope against persecution and domination, art collector and philanthropist Nadia Samdani tells us.
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Events and ProgrammesGallery Teach-In$1.00A unique academic engagement where professors from diverse disciplines bring their classrooms into the galleries, explore connections between their curriculum and the collection on view and experiment with new ways of teaching through art.
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JournalSinging the Body Electric: A Conversation with Gogi Saroj Pal$0.00Gogi Saroj Pal is one of India's most important artists working with the female body.
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JournalWilliam Dalrymple on 'Indian Painting for the East India Company'$1.00Also known as Company School, this genre is the Indo-European style of painting made in India by Indian artists, most of whom worked under the patronage of the East India Company. Focusing on a spectacular painting, William Dalrymple takes us through a journey of this neglected yet outstanding genre of art from nineteenth century India.
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JournalAlita Chandra on Avinash Chandra$0.00Alita Chandra, daughter of the artist Avinash Chandra reflects on the transcultural influences on his painting and his preoccupation with female subjects.
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JournalAn Elsewhere Homeland: Sayed Haider Raza’s Iconic Masterpiece$0.00‘Raza was in some ways an earth painter—someone to whom earth mattered both as a constant presence and an irrepressible memory.’ Ashok Vajpeyi looks at the natural mechanics of Sayed Haider Raza’s abstractions, tracing his relationship with landscape and art.
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