Akriti to Sanskriti: The Journey of Indian Forms
Book Specification
Item Code: | NAJ924 |
Author: | Harsha V. Dehejia |
Publisher: | Niyogi Books |
Language: | English |
Edition: | 2010 |
ISBN: | 9788189738532 |
Pages: | 248 (Throughout Color Illustrations) |
Cover: | Hardcover |
Other Details | 11.5 inch x 8.5 inch |
Weight | 1.30 kg |
Book Description
About the Book
India is a civilization of many images, a culture of many visual feasts, a tradition where the visible and the palpable arc as important as the oral and the occurrent, where our highest truths are embodied not only in our erudite texts but in our kathas (stories) and gathas (songs), akritis (visual forms) and rachanas (compositions), rich with a variety of forms, shapes, designs and motifs.
Akriti to Sankriti: The Journey of Indian Forms explores some akritis that adorn both majestic and grand monuments, as well as common and ordinary spaces, and which through their purely visual language are pointers to not only our culture, but equally to brahma jnana or transcendental knowledge.
These beautiful visual representations of both the ordinary people and artisans, are not individual expressions but that of the shared experiences of the community and the preserve of the family, passed down through endless generations. They are neither mere designs nor decorations, nor meant only for rites and rituals, but in their own unpretentious way become sources of visual knowledge and have a culture of their own.
Akriti to Sanskriti, a unique analysis and repository of Indian visual forms, is a collector's tome.
About the Author
Harsha V. Dehejia has a double doctorate -one in medicine and the other in Ancient Indian Culture, both from Mumbai University. He is a practising physician, and Professor of Indian Studies at Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. His main interest is in Indian Aesthetics. A widely respected aesthete and art collector, he has written extensively on Indian art and culture, including Parvati. Goddess of Love (1999): Despair and Modernity: Reflections on Modem Indian Paintings (2000): A Celebration of" Lore: The Romantic Heroine in the Indian Arts (2004): Celebrating Krishna: Sensuous Images and Sacred Word,' (2005): God,' Beyond Temples (2006) and A Festival of Krishna (2008).
Contents
1. | Akriti to Sanskriti | 9 |
2. | Adorning the Earth | 49 |
3. | The Aesthetics of Boundaries | 63 |
4. | Messengers of the Sky | 85 |
5. | From the Earth to the Sky | 101 |
6. | The Plenitude of Life | 121 |
7. | In the Image of Man: Purusha to Manushya | 137 |
8. | Kalasha: The Womb of the Universe | 161 |
9. | The Aesthetics of Space | 173 |
10. | From Surabhi to Airavat | 189 |
11. | Images of Totality | 205 |
12. | Farewell | 225 |
Glossary | 231 | |
Image Credits | 239 | |
Index | 240 |