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The Making of a New 'Indian' Art - Artists, Aesthetics and Nationalism in Bengal, c.1850-1920 (Paperback)
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The Making of a New 'Indian' Art - Artists, Aesthetics and Nationalism in Bengal, c.1850-1920 (Paperback)
Series: Cambridge South Asian Studies
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This book offers a path-breaking analysis of the transformations
that occurred in the art and aesthetic values of Bengal during the
colonial and nationalist periods. Tapati Guha-Thakurta moves beyond
most existing assumptions and narratives to explore the
complexities and diversities of the changes generated by Western
contacts and nationalist preoccupations in art. She examines the
shifts both in the forms and practices of painting as well as in
the ideas and opinions about Indian art during the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries. The author investigates the complex
processes of westernisation of Calcutta's art world: the shifting
status of artisans and artists, the emergence of new professional
and commercial opportunities and the permeation of Western
standards and techniques that both created a new Indian 'high art'
and transformed popular commercial art. Against this background,
she analyses the role and nature of nationalist ideology in art,
tracing its changing priorities over the period and the
multiplicity of attitudes and convictions about 'Indian' art. The
study deals particularly with the ways in which a dominant
nationalist discourse evolved in the Swadeshi period and was
mobilised to the cause of a new movement. Led by the reformist art
teacher, E. B. Havell, and the pioneer artist, Abanindranath
Tagore, it staked its exclusive claim to artistic regeneration, the
recovery of tradition and the creation of a new 'national art'. The
author shows how the flourishing of an alternative 'Indian-style'
painting was tied to the reconstruction of an Indian aesthetic, to
a new vocabulary of art criticism and a new language of aesthetic
discourse. These orientalist andnationalist formulations of Indian
art, she argues, operated within a wider milieu of aesthetic
self-awareness and a thriving middle-class art culture in Bengal.
The making of a new 'Indian' art will be widely read by students
and specialists of South Asian studies and art history as well as
by Orientalists.
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