Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
This volume explores the Indian artist, K. Venkatappa's life (1886-1965), his works and the political and cultural contexts that influenced and inspired his art. It looks at the artist's style and examines the question of modernity in Indian art through the interstices of the regional and the national.
This richly illustrated book contextualises Venkatappa's work in the milieu of Calcutta, princely Mysore and later Bangalore in the first half of the twentieth century, at a time when boundaries, horizons, and identities were in great flux. It complicates a unitary history of modern Indian art and, indeed, modernity in colonial India with its engagement with the question of region.
The volume discusses Venkatappa's engagements with Indian artistic nationalism, the Bengal Renaissance, asceticism, as well as western modernist art and highlights the ambivalences and contradictions in his work. Through an in-depth reading of these diverse contexts, the essays in this book examine the artist's legacy and his contemporary relevance, while showing how the trajectories of regional modernities can unsettle singular accounts of a nation's art. This volume, part of the Visual Media and Histories Series, will be of interest to students and researchers of history of art, history, modern Indian art, visual studies, and cultural studies.
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
This volume explores the Indian artist, K. Venkatappa's life (1886-1965), his works and the political and cultural contexts that influenced and inspired his art. It looks at the artist's style and examines the question of modernity in Indian art through the interstices of the regional and the national.
This richly illustrated book contextualises Venkatappa's work in the milieu of Calcutta, princely Mysore and later Bangalore in the first half of the twentieth century, at a time when boundaries, horizons, and identities were in great flux. It complicates a unitary history of modern Indian art and, indeed, modernity in colonial India with its engagement with the question of region.
The volume discusses Venkatappa's engagements with Indian artistic nationalism, the Bengal Renaissance, asceticism, as well as western modernist art and highlights the ambivalences and contradictions in his work. Through an in-depth reading of these diverse contexts, the essays in this book examine the artist's legacy and his contemporary relevance, while showing how the trajectories of regional modernities can unsettle singular accounts of a nation's art. This volume, part of the Visual Media and Histories Series, will be of interest to students and researchers of history of art, history, modern Indian art, visual studies, and cultural studies.