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decademy Don’t just memorize. Learn. 2015-16 India Quicknotes WESTERN ART HISTORY Old Stone Age/Paleolithic: Chauvet, Lascaux, Altamira animal cave paintings. Venus of Willendorf (statues) New Stone Age/Neolithic: megaliths, Stonehenge Mesopotamia: Sumerian ziggurats, Akkadian monarchy, Neo-Sumerian Ziggurat of Ur, Babylonian Stele of Hammu- rabi, Assyrian reliefs, Neo-Babylonian Hanging Gardens and Ishtar Gate, Persian Persepolis Egypt: monumental, Sphinx, Giza Pyramids, hierarchical scale/Palette of King Narmer, Bust of Nefertiti, Burial Mask of Tut, fractional representation Pre-Greek: marine life; Cycladic geometric nudes, Crete sea life/Palace of Knossos, Mycenaean gold Greek: stoic; Doric/Ionic/Corinthian orders, black-/red-figure pottery, contrapposto statues (Early), Parthenon (High) Hellenistic: emotional/detailed, Asian-influenced, Venus de Milo, Laocoon Group Roman: Greek expanded; concrete, curved/Roman arch, Colosseum, Pantheon, Arch of Constantine Byzantine: Christian, mosaics, Hagia Sofia Medieval: hand-copied Bibles (Book of Kells, Coronation Gospels), small jewelry (Germanic, Hiberno-Saxon), Ro- manesque (barrel vault), Gothic (pointed arch, ribbed vault, flying buttresses, Chartres). Emphasizes churches. Early Renaissance: individual genius, Bondone (perspec- tive), Ghiberti (Gates of Paradise), Brunelleschi (Florence cathedral, linear perspective), Masaccio (aerial persp.), Do- natello (David bronze sculpture), Botticelli (Birth of Venus) High Renaissance: Renaissance Men, Da Vinci (Mona Lisa, Last Supper, sfumato smoke), Michelangelo (David, Moses, Dying/Bound Slave, Sistine Chapel), Raphael (School of Athens, Sistine Madonna) Other Renaissance: Giorgione (landscape, Tempest), Titian (colorist), Tintoretto (acidic, twisted Mannerism, Last Sup- per), El Greco (Counter-Reformation, ornate/opulent) N. Renaissance: more detailed, oil paints, Grunewald (cru- cifix, Isenheim Altarpiece), Durer (woodcut, 4 Horsemen), Holbein (portrait, England) Baroque: aristocratic, divine right; Louis XIV (Versailles, Academy), Caravaggio (chiaroscuro), Gentileschi (woman), Rubens (color), Rembrandt (self-portrait, Night Watch), Velazquez (color patches), Bernini (greatest, Ecstasy of St. Theresa, cloth-like stone) Rococo: Watteau (fete galante), Boucher, Fragonard Neoclassical: Fr. Revolution, Enlightenment; David (lines, Oath of Horatii), Ingres (pupil of David, rival of Delacroix) Romantic: emotional, nature; Delacroix, Blake, Gericault Realism: everyday; Courbet Stonebreakers, Daumier, Millet Impressionism: light, form through brushstrokes; Manet (Luncheon), Monet (Impression: Sunrise), Pissarro, Sisley Post-Impressionism: Cezanne (form), Seurat (optical mixing), Van Gogh (arbitrary color, Night Cafe), Gauguin (Primitivism), photography, Degas (Japanese), pre-Raphael- ites (Romantic, archaic), Art Nouveau (decorative) Early/Mid Modernism: see rest for most movements. Sur- realists (Freud and the mind in art, Dali, Magritte, Miro) NON-WESTERN ART HISTORY Abstract Expressionism: subject-less art, American; critics (Rosenberg, Greenberg), action paintings (de Kooning, Krasner, Kline, Pollock), color fields (Rothko, Albers) Pre-Pop/Pop Art: Johns (collages), Rauschenberg (com- bines, Bed, Monogram), Warhol (silk screening, soup can), Lichtensetein (dot comic books), Indiana (stencils) Minimalism: Stella, Smith (steel), Flavia (neon) Photorealism: sharp focus, Close, Hanson Earthworks: huge pieces, Christo/Jeanne-Claude (fabric fence, plastic island, orange gates), Heizer, Smithson Performance: impermanent, Guerrilla Girls Postmodern: Johnson, International Style, AT&T Bldg Chinese: dates to 4000 BC. Great Wall, Emperor of Qin terra- cotta army. Buddhism, started in Tang Golden Age, highly influential (ceramics, scroll drawings) India: 1600 languages, varied tradition. Shiva deities in sensuous Hindu style. Greek influenced Buddha depictions Japanese: artistically isolated 1600-1854; temporarily used Impressionist style; returned to isometric perspective, flat color. Impressionists copied prints African: excludes N. Africa (part of West history). Perishable fiber/wood used, meaning art didn’t last. Dan/Bwa masks, Namibian caves, Nok terra-cotta, Benin bronzes Oceanic: body art, Asmat shields; also perishable Islamic: decorated Quran copies, Dome of the Rock; cal- ligraphic and abstract, not figurative American: utilitarian; Pyramid of the Sun (Mexico); pueblos TRADITIONAL AND HINDU ART THE INDUS VALLEY The Indus River Valley civilization rivalled Egypt and Mesopotamia One major accomplishment was sanitation and water treatment; every home had a well, and there were central water systems These were better than many modern-day systems in the current Indus River Valley The best-preserved city is at Mohenjo-daro; the Great Bath of the city was used for ritual purification Indus Valley script remains undeciphered, and many of the ruins were destroyed or weathered away The Indo-Aryans brought Sanskrit and the Vedas around 1800 BCE from eastern Asia We know little about Indus Valley culture and life Key artistic works are small figurines and soapstone seals as well as larger statues, like Dancing Girl Bust of a man, possibly a priest, c. 2500-1800 BCE Soapstone sculpture of a pensive man; his somber expres- sion and decoration suggests a religious role Deep-cut, half-closed eyes originally had shell inlay Missing arm originally wrapped around body Alkali glaze means original work was white Repeated trefoil pattern Earholes suggest necklace originally present Originally had red gauze filling in most of the patterns HINDUISM AND SCULPTURE Hinduism is unified by a body of scripture and tradition rather than a central figure (like Jesus or Moses) The Vedas, attributed to the god Brahma, detail sruti (or “what is heard”) They were kept as oral tradition for centuries Four Vedas: Samhitas, Aranyakas, Brahmanas, Upanishads Other key (non-Vedic) texts: Mahabharata (and the Bhagavad Gita), Brahmasutras, Ramayana These are called smirti, or “what is written” Three major gods: Brahma the Creator, Vishnu the Preserver, Shiva the Destroyer and Restorer Each has different aspects or avatars Shiva can be depicted as a Yogi, householder, and warrior Key features include a third eye, snake around his neck, Ganges River flowing from hair, small drum He is often worshipped aniconically as a lingam, or small pillar (phallic symbol) Key avatars: Nataraja (Lord of Dance), Tripurantaka (Victor of the Three Cities), Chandrasekhara (Moon- Crowned King) Early statues were permanent stone; however, to allow them to “travel,” they were made of lighter bronze The Chola dynasty used direct lost-wax casting techniques to improve the sculptures’ stability This also reduced weight and may have been Greek Shiva as the Lord of Dance, copper alloy, 950-1100 Holds flame of destruction (apocalypse) Points to raised foot (refuge of the soul) Hindu priest-inspired garments: wrapped sarong, bare torso Tramples demon/dwarf Mushalagan in symbolic victory over ignorance Lotus pedestal symbolizes creation and primordial being Outstretched palm reassures the faithful Drum symbolizes sound of creation Shiva surrounded by aureole (aura) of flame Water of the Ganges flows forth from hair Nataraja is one of the most famous Shiva avatars Art

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2015-16IndiaQuicknotes

WESTERN ART HISTORY

Old Stone Age/Paleolithic: Chauvet, Lascaux, Altamira animal cave paintings. Venus of Willendorf (statues)

New Stone Age/Neolithic: megaliths, Stonehenge

Mesopotamia: Sumerian ziggurats, Akkadian monarchy, Neo-Sumerian Ziggurat of Ur, Babylonian Stele of Hammu-rabi, Assyrian reliefs, Neo-Babylonian Hanging Gardens and

Ishtar Gate, Persian Persepolis

Egypt: monumental, Sphinx, Giza Pyramids, hierarchical scale/Palette of King Narmer, Bust of Nefertiti, Burial Mask of

Tut, fractional representation

Pre-Greek: marine life; Cycladic geometric nudes, Crete sea life/Palace of Knossos, Mycenaean gold

Greek: stoic; Doric/Ionic/Corinthian orders, black-/red-figure pottery, contrapposto statues (Early), Parthenon (High)

Hellenistic: emotional/detailed, Asian-influenced, Venus de Milo, Laocoon Group

Roman: Greek expanded; concrete, curved/Roman arch, Colosseum, Pantheon, Arch of Constantine

Byzantine: Christian, mosaics, Hagia Sofia

Medieval: hand-copied Bibles (Book of Kells, Coronation Gospels), small jewelry (Germanic, Hiberno-Saxon), Ro-

manesque (barrel vault), Gothic (pointed arch, ribbed vault, flying buttresses, Chartres). Emphasizes churches.

Early Renaissance: individual genius, Bondone (perspec-tive), Ghiberti (Gates of Paradise), Brunelleschi (Florence

cathedral, linear perspective), Masaccio (aerial persp.), Do-natello (David bronze sculpture), Botticelli (Birth of Venus)

High Renaissance: Renaissance Men, Da Vinci (Mona Lisa, Last Supper, sfumato smoke), Michelangelo (David, Moses,

Dying/Bound Slave, Sistine Chapel), Raphael (School of Athens, Sistine Madonna)

Other Renaissance: Giorgione (landscape, Tempest), Titian (colorist), Tintoretto (acidic, twisted Mannerism, Last Sup-

per), El Greco (Counter-Reformation, ornate/opulent)

N. Renaissance: more detailed, oil paints, Grunewald (cru-cifix, Isenheim Altarpiece), Durer (woodcut, 4 Horsemen),

Holbein (portrait, England)

Baroque: aristocratic, divine right; Louis XIV (Versailles, Academy), Caravaggio (chiaroscuro), Gentileschi (woman),

Rubens (color), Rembrandt (self-portrait, Night Watch), Velazquez (color patches), Bernini (greatest, Ecstasy of St.

Theresa, cloth-like stone)

Rococo: Watteau (fete galante), Boucher, Fragonard

Neoclassical: Fr. Revolution, Enlightenment; David (lines, Oath of Horatii), Ingres (pupil of David, rival of Delacroix)

Romantic: emotional, nature; Delacroix, Blake, Gericault

Realism: everyday; Courbet Stonebreakers, Daumier, Millet

Impressionism: light, form through brushstrokes; Manet (Luncheon), Monet (Impression: Sunrise), Pissarro, Sisley

Post-Impressionism: Cezanne (form), Seurat (optical mixing), Van Gogh (arbitrary color, Night Cafe), Gauguin

(Primitivism), photography, Degas (Japanese), pre-Raphael-ites (Romantic, archaic), Art Nouveau (decorative)

Early/Mid Modernism: see rest for most movements. Sur-realists (Freud and the mind in art, Dali, Magritte, Miro)

NON-WESTERN ART HISTORY

Abstract Expressionism: subject-less art, American; critics (Rosenberg, Greenberg), action paintings (de Kooning,

Krasner, Kline, Pollock), color fields (Rothko, Albers)

Pre-Pop/Pop Art: Johns (collages), Rauschenberg (com-bines, Bed, Monogram), Warhol (silk screening, soup can),

Lichtensetein (dot comic books), Indiana (stencils)

Minimalism: Stella, Smith (steel), Flavia (neon)

Photorealism: sharp focus, Close, Hanson

Earthworks: huge pieces, Christo/Jeanne-Claude (fabric fence, plastic island, orange gates), Heizer, Smithson

Performance: impermanent, Guerrilla Girls

Postmodern: Johnson, International Style, AT&T Bldg

Chinese: dates to 4000 BC. Great Wall, Emperor of Qin terra-cotta army. Buddhism, started in Tang Golden Age, highly

influential (ceramics, scroll drawings)

India: 1600 languages, varied tradition. Shiva deities in sensuous Hindu style. Greek influenced Buddha depictions

Japanese: artistically isolated 1600-1854; temporarily used Impressionist style; returned to isometric perspective, flat

color. Impressionists copied prints

African: excludes N. Africa (part of West history). Perishable fiber/wood used, meaning art didn’t last. Dan/Bwa masks,

Namibian caves, Nok terra-cotta, Benin bronzes

Oceanic: body art, Asmat shields; also perishable

Islamic: decorated Quran copies, Dome of the Rock; cal-ligraphic and abstract, not figurative

American: utilitarian; Pyramid of the Sun (Mexico); pueblos

TRADITIONAL AND HINDU ART

THE INDUS VALLEY ▪ The Indus River Valley civilization rivalled Egypt and

Mesopotamia ▪ One major accomplishment was sanitation and water

treatment; every home had a well, and there were central water systems

▪ These were better than many modern-day systems in the current Indus River Valley

▪ The best-preserved city is at Mohenjo-daro; the Great Bath of the city was used for ritual purification

▪ Indus Valley script remains undeciphered, and many of the ruins were destroyed or weathered away

▪ The Indo-Aryans brought Sanskrit and the Vedas around 1800 BCE from eastern Asia

▪ We know little about Indus Valley culture and life ▪ Key artistic works are small figurines and soapstone seals

as well as larger statues, like Dancing Girl

Bust of a man, possibly a priest, c. 2500-1800 BCE ▪ Soapstone sculpture of a pensive man; his somber expres-

sion and decoration suggests a religious role ▪ Deep-cut, half-closed eyes originally had shell inlay ▪ Missing arm originally wrapped around body ▪ Alkali glaze means original work was white ▪ Repeated trefoil pattern ▪ Earholes suggest necklace originally present ▪ Originally had red gauze filling in most of the patterns

HINDUISM AND SCULPTURE ▪ Hinduism is unified by a body of scripture and tradition

rather than a central figure (like Jesus or Moses) ▪ The Vedas, attributed to the god Brahma, detail sruti (or

“what is heard”) ▪ They were kept as oral tradition for centuries ▪ Four Vedas: Samhitas, Aranyakas, Brahmanas,

Upanishads ▪ Other key (non-Vedic) texts: Mahabharata (and the

Bhagavad Gita), Brahmasutras, Ramayana ▪ These are called smirti, or “what is written”

▪ Three major gods: Brahma the Creator, Vishnu the Preserver, Shiva the Destroyer and Restorer

▪ Each has different aspects or avatars ▪ Shiva can be depicted as a Yogi, householder, and warrior

▪ Key features include a third eye, snake around his neck, Ganges River flowing from hair, small drum

▪ He is often worshipped aniconically as a lingam, or small pillar (phallic symbol)

▪ Key avatars: Nataraja (Lord of Dance), Tripurantaka (Victor of the Three Cities), Chandrasekhara (Moon-Crowned King)

▪ Early statues were permanent stone; however, to allow them to “travel,” they were made of lighter bronze

▪ The Chola dynasty used direct lost-wax casting techniques to improve the sculptures’ stability

▪ This also reduced weight and may have been GreekShiva as the Lord of Dance, copper alloy, 950-1100

▪ Holds flame of destruction (apocalypse) ▪ Points to raised foot (refuge of the soul) ▪ Hindu priest-inspired garments: wrapped sarong, bare

torso ▪ Tramples demon/dwarf Mushalagan in symbolic victory

over ignorance ▪ Lotus pedestal symbolizes creation and primordial being ▪ Outstretched palm reassures the faithful ▪ Drum symbolizes sound of creation ▪ Shiva surrounded by aureole (aura) of flame ▪ Water of the Ganges flows forth from hair ▪ Nataraja is one of the most famous Shiva avatars

Art

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HINDU WALL MURALS

HINDU ART

OVERVIEW EARLY ISLAM IN INDIA ▪ Islam arrived in India in the 600s; the Cheraman Juma

Masjid was the first mosque constructed ▪ Northwestern India and Pakistan was ruled by the Islamic

Ghaznavid Empire and Ghurid Dynasty ▪ Mu’izz ad-Din Muhammed of the Ghurid Dynasty

conquered Delhi in 1200, cementing Islam in India ▪ The Qubbat-ul-Islam Mosque (Delhi, 1198) emphasized

this triumph ▪ The Qutb complex featured minarets and Indian/Hindu

elements ▪ Islamic art was iconoclastic, abstract and often highly

floral

▪ The Ramayana is the most popular Hindu epic in India ▪ The god Rama, an avatar of Vishnu, tries to save his

wife Sita from Ravana, the king of Sri Lanka ▪ It describes the meaning of dharma, or law/duty

▪ Kerala (southwestern India) wall murals and depictions are some of the most famous Ramayana works

▪ The egalitarian Bhakti movement promoted dynamic, shaded, 3D wall paintings in the 1400s

▪ Kerala paintings use Pancha-mala borders, which emphasize five key figures: bhootha-mala (goblins), pakshi-mala (parrots), chitra-mala (abstract), vana-mala (flowers), mrugg-mala (elephants and deer)

▪ They also use the Pancha-vama color scheme of intense red, yellow, green, black and white

▪ The frescos were typically fresco secco ▪ The movement resurged following the destruction of the

Guruvayar Temple frescos

Detail of a wall painting, Mattancherry Palace, 1663 ▪ Painted as part of Dutch restoration in 1663

▪ Better known as the “Dutch Palace;” originally built by Portuguese, whom the Dutch replaced

▪ Traditional Indian building: two stories, narrow hallways

▪ Central figure is Rama: green skin, calm face. Holds arrow ▪ Rama and his brother Lakshmana enter an alliance with

the monkey king Sugriva ▪ Sugriva has white skin, an elongated nose, and a

broad jaw; meant to look like a monkey ▪ Lakshmana is blue-skinned, with open eyes ▪ Sugriva’s attendant Hanuman is also a monkey

▪ Elaborate costumes, headdresses typical for Kerala works ▪ Crowded mural work is typical of this style

ASHOKAN ART

▪ Buddhism was founded by Siddhartha Gautama between 500-300 BCE in eastern India

▪ He was born noble but encountered sickness, death, and a renunciate monk

▪ He left his heritage and became an ascetic ▪ Later, he learned yoga and meditation and created the

Middle Way/Path after meditating under a bodhi tree for 49 days

▪ This path attempted to mediate between ascetism and worldly pleasures

▪ He advocated the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path

▪ Buddhism strongly promoted karma, reincarnation, and the ultimate attainment of nirvana

The Great Stupa, overseen by Devi, c. 200 BCE ▪ Anda (central dome) set on platform; symbolizes the

“world mountain” ▪ Yasti pillar on top of anda marks axis of the universe ▪ Three chatras (disks) sit atop the yasti; symbolize Three

Jewels of Buddhism: Law, Buddha, Sangha (monks) ▪ Toranas (gateways) sit at the four cardinal directions

▪ Carvings tell stories from Buddha’s life ▪ Flowers, animals, Buddhist symbols, and elaborate

capitals also decorate the toranas ▪ Harmika fencing surrounds anda ▪ Walkway allows for worship

THE MUGHAL EMPIRE ▪ Babur founded the Mughal Empire by conquering

Hindustan in 1526 ▪ It was the last major pre-colonial empire to rule India

▪ Its people practiced Sunni Islam and spoke Persian, later Urdu (not native Indian languages)

▪ The empire did not practice primogeniture

Relic stupa: remains of Buddha or key disciples

Object stupa: key objects from Buddha’s life

Commemorative stupa: markers of key events

Symbolic stupa: represents key aspect of Buddha

Votive stupa: made as an offering

Seated Buddha from Gandhara, c. 200-300 ▪ Made of grey schist (stone) for permanence ▪ Ushnisha hairknot modelled after Greek statues of Apollo;

ushnisha typically represented larger brain ▪ Urna (mole) in center of forehead ▪ Dhyana cross-legged meditation ▪ Perfectly symmetrical and calm; halo frames figure’s face ▪ Base depicts Buddha, a Bodhisattva (enlightened one),

four other worshippers, and lions ▪ Drapery connects seated Buddha to base ▪ Would have been carried

INDO-ISLAMIC ART

Humayun (r. 1530-40) tried to consolidate his father Babur’s rule but was exiled to Persia in 1540. He returned tri-umphantly in 1555 with the help of the Safavid Persians and Shah Tasmash; this solidified the Persian roots of the Mughal

Empire, but he died in an accident shortly after returning

Babur (r. 1526-30) conquered much of Hindustan from an Afghan king; He focused on battle and was unable to

consolidate/control territories

Sher Shah Suri (r. 1540-45) was an ethnic Pashtun, unlike the Persian Mughals. He was a gifted administrator and ruler; reformed postal system and taxes and built roads.

Died 1545 in an accident

Akbar the Great (r. 1556-1605) ushered in a golden age for Mughal court and art

Shahjahan (r. 1628-58) reached height of Mughal architec-ture; built Taj Mahal and many other works

Aurangzeb (r. 1658-1707) expanded the empire the most, but overextended; empire faded afterwards

WEAVING AND CARPETMAKING ▪ Carpets are used in Islam for kneeling; they commonly

have a mihrab niche indicating prayer toward Mecca ▪ The weft is pulled through the vertical warp (on a loom)

to create a carpet ▪ They were commonly made from wool, silk, and cotton ▪ Turkish carpets added tufts (extra knots) to create pat-

terns in the pile ▪ They did not spread in India due to the country’s warmth;

Akbar the Great brought Persian weavers in the 1500s ▪ Indian carpets feature large central medallions and floral

patterns

Indo-Persian Carpet with Medallions, c. 1680

▪ Made of cotton, with wool pile added

▪ Perfectly symmetrical ▪ Burgundy, gold, blue/black ▪ Dark outer border: repeating

floral pattern ▪ Central blue medallion; two

matching gold medallions ▪ Staggered medallions unusual

BUDDHIST ART

▪ The Emperor Ashoka spread Buddhism in the 3rd century BCE, after seeing the destruction of the Kalinga War

▪ He constructed pillars and stupas (closed temples) at major points in Buddha’s life

▪ Ashoka’s lion, which topped the pillars, is still a major symbol of India

▪ Stupas often held Buddhist relics or ashes of Buddha; there were 5 major types of stupas

OTHER BUDDHIST ART ▪ Gandharan sculptors, influenced by Greco-Roman and

Hellenistic works, created sculptures of Buddha ▪ Traditionally depicted in a sanghati monk’s outfit

▪ Key events depicted: birth, enlightenment, first sermon, death (parinirvana)

▪ Buddhism split into two branches, Therevada (more human) and Mahanaya (more divine), around 200

▪ Buddha became more Indian-influenced, with a frontal, mask-liked face

▪ His proportions also became fixed around the angula, or width of a finger

▪ Face was 12 angulas; entire figure was 108 standing/60 sitting; 12 angulas for palm

▪ Japanese Buddhism also spread; the Sakyamuni is an enduring sculpture of this movement

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▪ Persian miniatures depicted people, animals, land-scapes in small, intricate paintings

▪ Human form not banned in Persia or Mughal India ▪ Painted on paper made from rags ▪ Style typically flat; subject viewed from slightly above ▪ Miniatures bound with carpet pages and calligraphy

into muraqqa books ▪ Gulshan Album commissioned by Jahangir began

using some Western techniques

INDO-ISLAMIC ART

METALWORKING ▪ Metal objects were used as functional objects at all

levels of Islamic society ▪ Metal water bowls were created for smoking hookah

▪ Key production processes: casting, hammering, turn-ing, spinning

▪ Materials: copper, silver, gold, iron ▪ Key patterns: floral and calligraphic patterns ▪ Bidriware was made in India; emphasized flowers,

Quranic verses ▪ Architecture, animals, people were very rare ▪ Made with silver-inlaid zinc; gold and brass also used

TEXTILES ▪ Cotton originated in India; woven cotton fabrics have

existed since Vedic times ▪ Indian weavers were also skilled at dyeing cotton; they

used mordants (catalysts) to bind dyes to cotton fibre ▪ Pen work directly applied patterns

▪ Resists allowed fabrics to keep their color ▪ Block printing (like silkscreening) allowed for repeated

patterns and elaborate designs ▪ Designs were typically colorful and floral ▪ Europeans loved Indian cottons; Portuguese and Dutch

traders brought chintzes ▪ The British government blocked imports of Indian clothes;

British factories had to process them

MINIATURES

Base for a water pipe, c. 1650-1700 ▪ Zinc alloy with silver and brass inlay ▪ Very unusual: depicts animals and architecture

▪ Animals depicted w/ anatomy emphasized ▪ Posed bird emphasized on flared lip

▪ Chini khana (“China room”) on center; niches used to display prized porcelain

▪ Shows horror vacui; no blank space

The Emperor Shahjahan Riding, 1600s ▪ Shahjahan on horseback; traditional symbol of power

▪ Richly dressed horse: jeweled bridle ▪ Servant’s clothing mirrors Shahjahan’s but is less fancy

▪ Servant holds aftabi (sunshade) above Shahjahan; titled at angle to show detail

▪ Sky suggested by light blue and unpainted yellow paper ▪ Small marsh scene below emphasizes Shahjahan ▪ Patna’s Drawings muraqqa; contains calligraphy,

quotes, other drawings of Shahjahan and his family ▪ Outer border painted with delicate grisaille flowers

▪ The British built large, imposing government buildings in major Indian cities

▪ Government Houses housed the British leadership of each territory

▪ Many of these were English Renaissance-inspired; later works (like the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus in Mumbai) incorporated English and Indian motifs

Rashtrapati Niwas (The Viceregal Lodge), des. Henry Irwin, 1888

▪ Overall style: “Jacobethean,” combining Jacobean and Elizabethan architecture

▪ Material: local limestone and sandstone, like traditional Indian buildings

▪ Built as “hill station” and summer headquarters for Raj leaders, chiefly Lord Dufferin (Viceroy of India 1884-88)

▪ Medieval elements: entrance tower, crenellation, roof spire

▪ Stacked Roman-inspired arcades; small rooftop gardens ▪ Architect Henry Irwin also built Mysore Palace

COLONIAL ART

▪ Early Muslim tombs were simple, in keeping with Muhammed’s wishes

▪ However, later tombs often contained a mosque, which allowed for elaborate tomb decorations

▪ Muhammed’s simple tomb was replaced with the Al-Masjid an-Nabawi, an ornate complex

▪ Turkish tombs featured tomb towers (simple cylinders) and Islamic garden pavilions (with large domed squares)

▪ Mughal tombs adapted these pavilions into octagons ▪ Early Indo-Islamic tombs used post-and-lintel forms with

white marble and red sandstone ▪ Mughal emperors sponsored many tombs:

TOMBS AND THE TAJ MAHAL

Babur: Rambagh in Agra, Persian-style gardens and fountains

Humayun: “floating palace”

Akbar: Humayun’s tomb, Fort at Agra, Great Mosque at Fatehpur Sikri

Jahangir: Shalimar Gardens at Kashmir

Shahjahan: trained architect, golden age of Mughal archi-tecture. Wazir Khan Mosque, Red Fort at Delhi, Pearl

Mosque at Agra, Taj Mahal

Taj Mahal Complex, des. Ustad Ahmad Lahauri, 1632-53

▪ Name means “Crown of Palaces” ▪ Built as tomb for Mumtaz Mahal, second wife and love

of Shahjahan ▪ Double dome in center, with four smaller domes ▪ Octagonal drum base, modeled after Islamic gardens ▪ Sits on large platform with hidden stairwell ▪ Cream-colored marble veneer ▪ Small minarets at corners; four large minarets on pavilion ▪ Many Islamic arches on building ▪ Frieze has repeating floral pattern; echoed throughout

building and platform ▪ Inscribed with Quran verses ▪ Located at back end of long garden, next to the Yamuna

River; most tombs were located in the center of gardens ▪ Red sandstone buildings on either side with similar

domes and designs ▪ Inspired by Throne of God on Judgment Day ▪ Urban legend: English planned to destroy the Taj Mahal

and reuse the marble

Coat (Wentke), mid-1700s ▪ Material: mordant and resist-

dyed cotton ▪ Indian pattern with European

lace trim ▪ Wentke worn by northern

Dutch women for formal occasions

▪ Drawn, painted, and dyed in India

▪ Uses diapering, decorative mo-tifs on plain-color background

ARCHITECTURE

St. Andrew’s Church, Chennai, des. Maj. Thomas Fiott de Havilland, 1818-21

▪ Circular shape instead of basilica, but still modeled after St. Martin-in-the-Fields w/ central tower

▪ Based off of Gibbs’ design; he published a modified design with this circular plan

▪ Neoclassical portico; wide pediment, Ionic columns ▪ Balustrade (stair-stick row) tops church ▪ Material: brick and pottery; painted white to look like

marble ▪ Ionic pillar facade around building ▪ Interior: Palladian style, with Corinthian columns and

circular pews ▪ Dome is blue with golden stars

▪ British also tried to spread Chris-tianity as part of “enlightened imperialism”

▪ The EIC banned missionaries for interfering in trade, but other Europeans and the Raj encour-aged them

▪ St. Martin-in-the-Fields (located in London) was copied across all British colonies

▪ Basilica (cross-shaped) structure with large apse (containing the altar)

▪ Central tower instead of dome at crossing ▪ Des. James Gibbs; became famous because of his

popular Book of Architecture ▪ Indian Corps of Engineers led construction; Capt.

Caldwell, Maj. de Havilland were leaders

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COLONIAL ART

KALIGHAT ART ▪ Kalighat painting spread

from Calcutta and was the first Indian modernist style

▪ They were small watercolors with bold subjects and limited perspective

▪ Subjects “floated” in the background (like Byzantine)

▪ Japanese/Chinese scroll-work reflected in simple shading and brushstrokes

▪ Many works depicted gods

POSTCOLONIALISM ▪ Postcolonialism broadly explores unequal power

relationships inherent in colonialism ▪ Edward Said described the “otherized” East

▪ Postcolonial art uses mimicry (adapting and changing Western styles) and hybridity (fusing styles)

▪ Yinka Shonibare makes statues based on Western paintings but with ghostly, headless, cloth figures

FOLK AND MITHILA ART ▪ Indian government, particularly Office of the Develop-

ment Commissioner, encourages folk art ▪ Mithila (also Madhubani) painting, from Nepal and

northeast India, is one major folk style ▪ Vedic Mithila women painted Hindu gods with fingers,

sticks, and non-brush tools ▪ They often used geometric patterns and flat colors

▪ This art form was “discovered” in the West in 1934 by Wil-liam G. Archer following an earthquake in Nepal

▪ The Ethnic Arts Foundation currently supports female Mithila artists

MODERN AND POSTCOLONIAL INDIAN ART

▪ The British made some pro-female reforms: encouraging female education, discouraging child marriages, and ban-ning sati (widow burns herself on her husband’s pyre)

▪ Often used as an excuse to impose colonialism ▪ Indian feminist groups: Bharat Stree Mahamandal,

Women’s Indian Association, Council of Women in India, All-India Women’s Conference

▪ Indira Gandhi served as Prime Minister for many years ▪ However, problems still exist, particularly with sexual

violence

FEMINISM

The Tables Have Turned, by Nalini Malani, 2008 ▪ Nalini Malani creates large installation pieces; site-

specific, temporary ▪ Counter “timeless” nature of traditional art ▪ Often have audience involvement ▪ Malani references historical/mythological depictions

of women to discuss modern feminism ▪ First major work: City of Desires (2006)

▪ This work: 32 Mylar cylinders spin on turntables 5 times per minute

▪ Projector light shined through them, shining images on the wall

▪ 20-minute looping soundtrack plays text from Cassan-dra: A Novel and Four Essays

▪ Cassandra, a mythical Greek figure, has the gift of prophecy but is damned by Apollo: nobody will believe her, and Troy is destroyed

▪ Symbol of powerlessness, voicelessness

NUMISMATICS ▪ Numismatics studies currency and coins; these artifacts

are crucial in understanding society’s organization ▪ One of the few opportunities for widespread images

of a ruler ▪ Also used for economic analysis (past trade patterns)

▪ The Indian rupee dates to about 500 BCE ▪ Its name is from the Sanskrit “rupa,” or “silver” ▪ Pre-modern versions include Kanishka’s gold coins and

Sher Shah Suri’s rupiya ▪ The British Raj issued paper and metal rupees and

annas (1/16 of a rupee) ▪ The post-independence rupee has been devalued repeat-

edly ▪ First designs: Lion Capital of Ashoka, Hindu text ▪ The Mahatma Gandhi Series was issued in 1996

Englishman on Tiger Hunt, c. 1830 ▪ Subject: Englishman riding elephant and hunting tiger

▪ Figures painted atop each other ▪ Gun upside-down; probably satirical ▪ Typical 1820s English attire: top-hat, cut-away coat ▪ Tiger’s tongue, teeth depicted; elephant appears about

to step on him ▪ Strong black outlines; color added later ▪ No background or setting ▪ Englishman sits on a carpet saddle ▪ In reality: elephant would be driven by mahout (trainer);

hunter would be protected in howdah (carriage)

PHOTOGRAPHY ▪ Maharaja were local “rulers”

appointed by the British ▪ They tried to Westernize by

speaking English and dress-ing in Western clothing

▪ British tourists were interested in pictures of India; lithographic aquatint prints became quite popular

▪ Oriental Scenery, A Pictur-esque Voyage to India

Studio Portrait of Ram Singh of Jaipur, Bourne & Shepherd, c. 1877

▪ Subject: Ram Singh, maharaja of Jaipur ▪ “Normal” photo; meant to show him as “everyday” ▪ No distinct backdrop; patterned carpet, small drapery

piece only major elements ▪ Indian robe, skirt; Western pants and shoes; simple

jewelry ▪ Singh is carefully groomed ▪ Chair, table, book common European portrait elements ▪ European-influenced contrapposto pose

A Holy Man in the Forest (Shiva as Lord of the Animals), by Jogmaya Devi, 1981

▪ Material: ink on paper ▪ Central figure: man (possibly Shiva) with single eye,

dreadlock hair, horizontal forehead marker ▪ Posed with crossed legs and with colorful stripes ▪ Holds prayer beads ▪ Shiva as Pashupati (Lord of Animals) was one com-

mon depiction of the deity ▪ Other animals colorfully depicted:

▪ Two lions, one with with a lizard head and another with polka-dot mane, eye-shaped markings

▪ Deer/antelope with similar markings ▪ Small bird and small, antlered animal ▪ Elephant underneath meditating man

▪ Horror vacui present; no blank space ▪ Repeated motifs and colors unify the work; downward-

looking eye, bright colors, horizontal stripes ▪ Very typical of Mithila paintings

IITK Kelkar Library, des. Achyut Kanvinde, 1962 ▪ Material: reinforced concrete skeleton, brick highlights ▪ Bauhaus, Brutalist influence ▪ Three floors spread outward, shading the bottom and

creating a portico ▪ Strong vertical concrete pillars ▪ Architect Kanvinde trained at Harvard under Gropius,

then established own firm

as secular heroes or actors ▪ Workshop-produced; male patuas would draw outlines,

women would color in ▪ Replaced by lithographs and photographs later

POSTCOLONIAL ARCHITECTURE ▪ Two main schools of postcolonial Indian architecture ▪ Indo-Saracenic Revivalists brought back Hindu styles

▪ Secretariat Building in New Delhi, other govern-ment buildings used this style

▪ Modernists wanted to adapt Western architecture to Indian contexts; this was more successful

▪ The Bauhaus International style was very popular ▪ Louis Kahn (Yale University Art Gallery, Indian Insti-

tute of Management) and Le Courbusier (Chandigarh) ▪ Brutalism was also widespread

▪ Nehru encouraged education and founded the Indian Institute of Technology Karpur (IITK)

▪ Its campus was built in a Brutalist style

Rs. 1000 note, Mahatma Gandhi series, Reserve Bank of India, 1996-present

▪ Image of Gandhi from 1946 photograph with Lord Pethick Lawrence at eve of Independence

▪ Shows him as “father of the nation” ▪ Reversed from photograph

▪ Front side: Ashoka Lion Capital, Reserve Bank of India seal, blank space with watermark

▪ Obverse: India’s economy highlighted with oil drills, fac-tory, satellite, industrial agriculture, computer

▪ Both Hindi and English text ▪ All details created with fine-point intaglio engraving ▪ Other notes in series feature different elements of India:

buildings, landscape, animals

▪ Photography replaced miniatures and Kalighat paintings ▪ They were also used for official purposes

▪ Bourne & Shepherd was a major Indian photography studio and is the oldest still in existence

▪ Two founders: Charles Shepherd, Samuel Bourne ▪ Bourne was a famous celebrity photographer

▪ Photographic portraits very popular among the maharaja ▪ “Royal Photographic Album” collected many that

were presented as gifts at durbars (court gatherings) ▪ Raja Ramachandra Tondaiman, the maharaja of

Pugukkotta, was depicted in several famous ones