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Six Hundred Years of Indian Art
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10492 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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2 / 1986 |
4,495 Words |
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Susan Fegley Osmond Susan Fegley Osmond is an editor in the Arts section of The
World & I. |
Throughout history the Indian subcontinent has attracted wave after wave of traders, invaders, and empire builders. As a result this region has accrued a culture of astonishing diversity. Just how varied this culture is was vividly demonstrated in a recent exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. INDIA! displayed six hundred years of Indian art, from 1300--the time of the great Muslim invasions--to 1900, when the subcontinent was largely under British rule.
The general American conception of Indian art is perhaps quite monolithic, but the Metropolitan's landmark show, which closed January 5, will probably be remembered for having significantly broadened, and to some extent redefined, the typical image of Indian art in the popular American imagination.
Six years in the making, INDIA! which became a central event in the 1985-1986 nationwide Festival of India, was an exhibition unlike any other previously assembled in the United States. Not only were all regions of the subcontinent represented, in itself an unusual undertaking, but the varied traditions of sacred, court, urban, folk, and tribal art were all included in a stunning display of over three hundred carefully chosen objects. The exhibition unfortunately will not travel.
In the entryway to the exhibit, three photographs of contemporary India introduced themes that permeate all Indian art: the centrality of the sacred and the spiritual, and the profound closeness to the body of nature. This unexpected bonding of the spiritual and the earthly gives Indian art unique power and
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