Posted on: 2 April 2013

New Book:
Wonder of the age
By John Guy and Jorrit Britschgi
Published by Metropolitan Museum of Art - 2011

This vividly illustrated publication features 110 works by many of the most eminent painters in the history of Indian art. These remarkable paintings, dating from 1100 to 1900, were selected according to identifiable artists, and they refute the long-held view of anonymous authorship in Indian art.

Traditionally, Indian paintings have been classified by regional styles or dynastic periods, with an emphasis on subject matter. Stressing the combined tools of connoisseurship and inscriptional evidence, the pioneering research reflected in this book has identified individual artists and their oeuvres through the analysis of style.

The introductory essay outlines the origins of early Indian painting of the first millennium, which set the scene for the development of the art of the book. The sections that follow examine manuscript painting as it evolved from palm-leaf to paper, the emergence of traditional painting as an independent art form, and its demise with the coming of photography. Biographies of the artists whose works appear in this volume and a glossary of their major literary sources provide valuable context.

Preview this book:

http://bit.ly/Z5trgj


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Golden hallow

Shah Jahan on horseback, painting by Prayag

Pankaj Sapkal Amazingly this painting looks similar to Shivaji

Sameer Khan: oh, i think the stylistic influences on painters would be more or less uniform in those days, plus there would have been a semantics of noble-looking clothing that all rulers of that era would have followed.

True yet there is remarkable similarity