Categories
Biographies India Modern

Art and Independence: YG Srimati and the Indian Style by John Guy

We are actually growing very tired of non Indian writers claiming authoritative position on Indian art, history, religions, society and so on and so forth. However, this book is quite different. John Guy aims to correct the legacy of YG Smriti, a somewhat controversial figure in the Indian art scene during the mid last century. Read on…

• Offers a historical corrective to re-establish the legacy of YG Srimati, one of modern India’s finest artists

• At a time when there is renewed interest in the voices and works of women artists, this volume takes us through the life and genius of one such artist from India

• This volume offers an insight into the way that styles and trends influence the art world, with artists falling out of favor for complex reasons that have nothing to do with talent

• Beautifully illustrated with nearly 130 images

The career of Y.G. Srimati – classical singer, musician, dancer and painter – represents a continuum in which each of these skills and experiences merged, influencing and pollinating each other.

Born in Mysore in 1926, Srimati was part of the generation much influenced by the rediscovery of a classical Sanskrit legacy devoted to the visual arts. Soon swept up in the nationalist movement for an independent India, she was deeply moved by the time she spent with Mahatma Gandhi. For the young Srimati, the explicit referencing of the past and of religious subjects came together in an unparalleled way, driven by the conscious striving for an indigenous agenda. This experience gave form and meaning to her art, and largely defined her style.

As John Guy demonstrates in this sumptuous volume, as a painter of the mid and late twentieth century, Y.G. Srimati embodied a traditionalist position, steadfast in her vision of an Indian style, one which resonated with those who knew India best.

From the book description

If for nothing else, you should buy this book for the wonderful 130 illustrations and the excellent compilation. We will not comment on the writer’s opinions and leave that work to the reader – you! Widely available at leading book stores.

Categories
Biographies Design Japan

Yoshitaka Amano: The Illustrated Biography-Beyond the Fantasy by Florent Gorges

Dear Readers, wishing you a very happy and a prosperous new year 2019! It seems like we cannot have enough of Japan, therefore, this month we present to you a wholesome collection of art presented in a biographical format. Those who are familiar with Yoshitaka Amano must know the dazzling fantasy world created and nurtured by this great artist of our times. Read on…

A beautiful celebration of the life and imagery of Japan’s master of fantasy and science fiction art! This handsome, landscape-style hardback contains nearly 400 illustrations and photos from the incredible career of Final Fantasy designer Yoshitaka Amano.

But Beyond the Fantasy covers far more than just the famous game series. Amano’s artistic journey goes back to his first job in 1967—age 15, working on Speed Racer! From animator, to illustrator, to internationally exhibited painter, this biography is a look not only into the work of Amano’s life, but the influences, techniques, philosophy, and family that have nurtured it.

From the book description.

This is a great book for all those readers who enjoy learning about Japan, If you are not familiar with fantasy world, you will learn a lot about it. This book is not widely available. Reserve your copy by calling your local book store ahead.

Categories
Ancient India Museums

Art and Archaeology of Ancient India: Earliest Times to the Sixth Century by Naman P. Ahuja

Wishing all our readers Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. This month we bring to you a topic that is very close to us – Art in Ancient India. For those who know India also know about the wonderful art of Ancient India – be it through sculptures, statues, cave paintings, or other archaeological finds. This fascinating book from Naman P. Ahuja pulls all these resources together to create an engrossing volume on the subject. Read on…

• This book covers all early Indian objects (pre-600 AD) held by the Department of Eastern Art in the Ashmolean Museum • Contains previously unpublished material • New photography for all objectsThe Ashmolean Museum is fortunate in having the most comprehensive British collection of the art of the Indian subcontinent outside London. Especially strong in sculpture, this rich representation of Indian art from prehistory to the twentieth century has come about through the generosity of our benefactors over more than three centuries. The Museum’s first major Indian sculpture acquisition, a stone Pala-style Vishnu image of the eleventh century, was given in 1686 by Sir William Hedges, a governor of the East India Company in Bengal. From the late nineteenth century, a substantial core of the present collection was assembled at the University’s former Indian Institute Museum (1897-1962), precursor of the Department of Eastern Art, which opened within the Ashmolean in 1963. Since that date many more Indian objects of all periods have been acquired by gift, bequest or purchase.

From the book description

If you are still looking for a new year gift for yourselves or for someone else, this book will be an excellent purchase. Widely available now. Get your copy today.

Categories
Culture India Religious

In the Shadow of the Devi KUMAON: Of A Land, A People, A Craft by Manju Kak

This month we bring to you an excellent book about one of the most revered places for Hindus. While we have no authority or intention to write about religious topics, what we would like to share is that this book is an excellent work of art to pull together so many aspects of culture. Read on…

A one-of-a-kind book which examines in great detail all aspects of life in Kumaon – from ethnography to the environment, and the history, crafts and architecture that characterize the area

Richly illustrated, this book features photographs by renowned Kumaoni photographer Anup Sah, among others; it also includes illustrations & sketches

Meticulously researched over an extended period of time, this book is both informative and accessible, to laypeople interested in the region as well as academics.

The untamed beauty of the Himalayas immediately captures our collective imagination with visions of serenity, natural splendor and mysticism. But these mountains also dictate the lives of those who live by its laws – the resilient hill dwellers, or paharis, whose work and lives are shaped by their surroundings.

In the Shadow of the Devi: Kumaon details the legacy of a land, a people and a craft deeply intertwined with its environment. Manju Kak looks at this enigmatic land of Kumaon through the prism of woodcraft, unique in its aesthetic in this part of India, documenting the styles, influences and techniques used by the craftsmen of Uttarakhand, as well as Kumaoni artisans’ worldview and beliefs. In addition, this book is an important document of the life of paharis, as it also discusses communities, forest policy and the status of women, analyzing and unraveling facets of hill life that made Kumaon’s claim for statehood so unique.

The book is beautifully complemented with photographs by award-winning Kumaoni photographer Anup Sah, among others. It is also a visual delight for those who have an interest in the region. It adds to the existing knowledge on Uttarakhand, emblematic of other Indian hill states, though its focus is on Kumaon, the land that lies in the shadow of the majestic mountain Nanda Devi.

This is quite an informative book, full of images and bearing almost a transportational quality to it. Readers who like to learn about different cultures through images will certainly appreciate this book. Available at select stores now.

Categories
Design Japan Posters Technique

Kanban: Traditional Shop Signs of Japan by Alan Scott Pate

Many of our readers have studied engineering or have been to a business school. Regardless, it is hard to escape the course on quality control and total quality management, and therefore most of you would be familiar with kanban cards. But do you know the story behind kanban, or the origin of kanban signs? This month we present to you a wonderful collection of kanban shop signs from Japan. Read on…

A glimpse into the markets, crafts, and signage of early modern Japan

Kanban are the traditional signs Japanese merchants displayed on the street to advertise their presence, represent the products and services to be found inside their shops, and lend a sense of individuality to the shops themselves. Created from wood, bamboo, iron, paper, fabric, gold leaf, and lacquer, these unique objects evoke the frenetic market scenes of nineteenth- and twentieth-century Japan, where merchants created a multifaceted world of symbol and meaning designed to engage the viewer and entice the customer.

Kanban provides a tantalizing look at this distinctive fusion of art and commerce. This beautifully illustrated book traces the history of shop signs in Japan, examines how they were created, and explores some of the businesses and trades they advertised. Some kanban are elongated panels of lacquered wood painted with elegant calligraphy and striking images, while others are ornately carved representative sculptures of munificent deities or carp climbing waterfalls. There are oversized functional Buddhist prayer beads, and everyday objects such as tobacco pipes, shoes, combs, and writing brushes. The book also includes archival photographs of market life in “old Japan,” woodblock prints of bustling marketplaces, and images of the goods advertised with these intricate and beguiling objects.

Providing a look into a unique, handmade world, Kanban offers new insights into Japan’s commercial and artistic roots, the evolution of trade, the links between commerce and entertainment, and the emergence of mass consumer culture.

From the book description

A fantastic treatise on the intersection of Japanese commerce and art, this book is sure to delight the readers. Widely available at all leading bookstores. Good bye, until the next post!

Categories
India Stone Carving

The Unfinished: The Stone Carvers at Work in the Indian Subcontinent by Vidya Dehejia, Peter Rockwell

For those of us in India, ancient rock sculptures as an art form is all around us. This month we bring to you a marvelous behind the scenes look at the work of stone carvers in an amazing new collection by Vidya Dahejia and Peter Rockwell.

The sheer number of unfinished stone monuments in India is staggering and examples appear at some of India’s most famous and well-studied sites that include rock-cut Ellora, Ajanta, and Mamallapuram. Unfinished work also appears on built temples celebrated for the intricacy of their sculpted decoration, such as those in Hoysala kingdom or in Orissa. This detailed study provides an overall coverage of India’s unfinished work while addressing a range of issues related to stone-carving by examining a select number of monuments at specific sites. Instead of focusing on a site in its entirety, the study here focuses on specific issues of consequence in the context of unfinished work, as they gain an added weight and significance through discovery of their repetitive occurrence at site after site.

At the heart of this book are the many varieties of unfinished stone carving that merit close observation to see what is there and what is not, and to appreciate that all the finished work has been through these various stages of being unfinished before reaching completion.

From the book description

While the book is a great coffee table companion, it is also a thought starter. It raises important questions about works, the technique and social context of stone carving communities. Now available at leading book stores.

Categories
Bhutan Culture Textiles

Fabric of Life – Textile Arts in Bhutan: Culture, Tradition and Transformation by Karin Altmann

egestas a, dui. Cras pellentesque. Sed dictum. Proin eget odio.

Categories
Asia Japan Society Theater War Woodcut

The Frozen Gesture: Kabuki Prints from the Collection of the Cabinet Darts Graphiques by Ellis Tinios, Christian Rumelin, Hans Bjarne Thomsen

Happy New Year 2016! As is our tradition for special new year posts, this month we bring a stunning collection for you. For the art followers with a keen interest in woodcuts, theater, and Japan, this Kabuki collection is a veritable treasure. For the uninitiated, Kabuki is a classical Japanese dance-drama. Kabuki theater is known for the stylization of its drama and for the elaborate Kumadori (make-up) worn by the actors.

Between the 17th and the 19th centuries, kabuki was the traditional theater for the bourgeoisie in Japan. Artists recorded numerous stage scenes and artists’ portraits in woodcuts. During the 19th century many of these works traveled to Europe, where they formed the basis for the impressive collection in Geneva consisting of more than 1,000 Japanese woodcuts in excellent condition. This lavishly illustrated catalog assembles more than a hundred of these woodcuts for the first time and provides a key to understanding Japanese culture.

From the book description

This is a wondrous deep dive into this much celebrated cultural aspect of Japan. The book is widely available at leading book stores.

Categories
Asia India Museums

Treasures Of Salarjung Museum by Dr. Shobita Punja

It is rare to see such a wonderful collection put together at home. We are delighted to introduce this great work of by Dr. Shobita Punja. Reader who’d like to understand Indian heritage better will greatly appreciate this curated collection of art.

This book highlights treasures of the Salar Jung Museum, showcasing the extraordinary personal collection of the Salar Jung family, presented under five themes. It includes Indian art, pan-Asian art, European art and many other rare and ancient treasures.

From the book description

This book is not widely available. Please contact us to check availability and prices.

Meanwhile, wishing all the readers a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year 2016! We will meet again next month.

Categories
Architecture Asia Culture History Japan Photography Society

Allegories of Time and Space: Japanese Identity in Photography and Architecture by Jonathan M. Reynolds

For those readers who are interested in learning more about the post-war Japanese society and culture up until the economic recession, this is an excellent collection from the lens of leading photographers.

Allegories of Time and Space explores efforts by leading photographers, artists, architects, and commercial designers to re-envision Japanese cultural identity during the turbulent years between the Asia Pacific War and the bursting of the economic bubble in the 1990s. This search for a cultural home was a matter of broad public concern, and each of the artists under consideration engaged a wide audience through mass media. The artists under study had in common the necessity to establish distance from their immediate surroundings temporally or geographically in order to gain some perspective on Japan’s rapidly changing society. They shared what Jonathan Reynolds calls an allegorical vision, a capacity to make time and space malleable, to see the present in the past and to find an irreducible cultural center at Japan’s geographical periphery.

The book commences with an examination of the work of Hamaya Hiroshi. A Tokyo native, Hamaya began to photograph the isolated “snow country” of northeastern Japan in the midst of the war. His empathetic images of village life expressed an aching nostalgia for the rural past widely shared by urban Japanese. Following a similar strategy in his search for authentic Japan was the photographer Tōmatsu Shōmei. Although Tōmatsu originally traveled to Okinawa Prefecture in 1969 to document the destructive impact of U.S. military bases in the region in his characteristically edgy style, he came to believe that Okinawa was still in some sense more truly Japanese than the Japanese main islands. The self-styled iconoclast artist Okamoto Tarō emphatically rejected the delicacy and refinement conventionally associated with Japanese art in favor of the hyper-modern qualities of the dynamic and brutal aesthetics that he saw expressed on the ceramics of the prehistoric Jōmon period. One who quickly recognized the potential in Okamoto’s embrace of Japan’s ancient past was the architect Tange Kenzō. As a point of comparison, Reynolds looks at the portrayal of the ancient Shintō shrine complex at Ise in a volume produced in collaboration with the photographer Watanabe Yoshio. Reynolds shows how this landmark book contributed significantly to a transformation in the meaning of Ise Shrine by suppressing the shrine’s status as an ultranationalist symbol and re-presenting the shrine architecture as design consistent with rigorous modernist aesthetics.

In the 1970s and 1980s, there circulated widely through advertising posters of the designer Ishioka Eiko, the ephemeral “nomadic” architecture of Itō Toyo’o, TV documentaries, and other media, a fantasy that imagined Tokyo’s young female office workers as urban nomads. These cosmopolitan dreams may seem untethered from their Japanese cultural context, but Reynolds reveals that there were threads linking the urban nomad with earlier efforts to situate contemporary Japanese cultural identity in time and space.

In its fresh and nuanced re-reading of the multiplicities of Japanese tradition during a tumultuous and transformative period, Allegories of Time and Space offers a compelling argument that the work of these artists enhanced efforts to redefine tradition in contemporary terms and, by doing so, promoted a future that would be both modern and uniquely Japanese.

From the book description

For the wandered in you, it is an excellent conversation starter. Hope you will like this sumptuous collection. Available at leading book stores.