Elite Class ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Mehrauli Gurgaon Road Delhi NCR
Indian art
1. Group 2
Burgos, Stacey
Cabotaje, Jose Maria
Casais, Bea Pauline
De Mesa, Juan Carlo
Estanislao, Wencee
Fenis, Cristelle
2. The major themes of Indian art
seem to begin emerging as early as
the Harappan period, about 2500
BC.
With the arrival of the Indo-
Europeans (or Aryans) around 1500
BC, came new artistic ideas.
3. Around 500 BC, the conversion to
Buddhism of a large part of the
population of India - brought new
artistic themes.
Conquests of Alexander the Great, in
the 320s BC - also had an important
impact on Indian art.
He left colonies of Greek veteran
soldiers in Afghanistan and
Pakistan, some of which were
sculptors.
4. Their Greek-style carvings attracted
attention in India.
First life-size stone statues in India
date to the 200s BC, just after
Alexander.
Guptan period, about 500 AD - great
cave temples of Ajanta and Ellora
were carved.
Scenes from the life of the Buddha
became popular, and statues of the
Buddha.
5. Carved from the 2nd-6th century and are 30
in number.
Dedicated to Buddhism and the carvings in
them portary the life of Lord Buddha along
with other carvings like that of animals.
6. The Ajanta Caves were carved out of
volcanic rock in the Maharashtra Plateau.
It was not far off from the ancient trade
routes attracting traders & pilgrims through
whom the Ajanta art style diffused as far as
China & Japan.
Buddhist Monks employed artists to turn the
stone walls into picture books of Buddha's
life & teachings.
They portrayed the costumes, ornaments &
styles of the court life of their times.
7. Arrival of Islamic faith and Islamic
conquerors about 1000 AD.
Brought iconoclasm to India, and a
love of varied and complex
patterning derived from Arabic and
Persian models.
This affected even Hindu artists who
had not converted to Islam.
Small Persian-style miniature
paintings also became popular.
8. A land of diverse cultures.
Variations in physical, climatic conditions
and the extent of exposure to other
cultures have greatly influenced the
traditions and culture of the different
regions.
The greatness of India - accepting the best
from all the invaders and intermingling the
new customs and styles with the existing -
visible in all aspects -
music, dance, painting, sculptures, architec
ture.
9. Indian religions is a classification for
religions that originated in the Indian
subcontinent; namely Hinduism, Jainism,
Buddhism and Sikhism.
These religions are also classified as
Eastern religions.
10. Hinduism is the predominant and
indigenous religion of the Indian
subcontinent. It includes a wide
spectrum of laws and prescriptions of
"daily morality" based on the notion of
karma, dharma, and societal norms.
Jainism is an Indian religion that prescribes
a path of non-violence towards all living
beings. Its philosophy and practice
emphasize the necessity of self-effort to
move the soul towards divine
consciousness and liberation.
11. Buddhism is a religion and philosophy
encompassing a variety of traditions,
beliefs and practices, largely based on
teachings attributed to Siddhartha
Gautama, commonly known as the Buddha
("the awakened one").
Sikhism embody the qualities of a "Sant-
Sipahie"—a saint-soldier. One must have
control over one's internal vices and be
able to be constantly immersed in virtues
clarified in the Guru Granth Sahib. A Sikh
must also have the courage to defend the
rights of all who are wrongfully oppressed
or persecuted irrespective of religion,
colour, caste or creed.
12.
13. India is a conglomeration of men and
women of various castes and creed.
It is a fusion of old traditional values
and the modern principles, thus
satisfying all the three generations in
the present India. The Elite
businessman and the common vendor
on the road share the same news and
worship the same deity .
14. With a 5000-year-old culture, rich in
its tapestry of ancient
heritage, medieval times, Mughal
rule, British rule, Progressive art and
now contemporary art.
The earliest recorded art of India
originated from a religious Hindu
background, which was later replaced
by a soaring popular Buddhist art.
15. India has been inspired by
spiritualism and mystical relationship
between man and god.
In India, all art, like all life, is given
over to religion. Indian art is life, as
interpreted by religion and
philosophy.
Described as theological, hieratic, or,
perhaps best of all as traditional.
16. Art in India had survived in its
homeland and spread from time to
time all over the world.
Many kings who recognized budding
talent patronized art and themselves
were great connoisseurs.
Each king has left a deep impression of
his affinity to the artist community.
Until today, art is patronized by the
rich and famous in the country.
17. The cultural policy of the Government
of India has three major objectives:
Preserving the cultural heritage of
India,
Inculcating Indian art consciousness
amongst Indians,
And promoting high standards in
creative and performing arts.
18. Western scholars have often had
difficulty understanding the complex
cultural and philosophical systems
that gave birth to Indian art
tradition.
The story of Indian art is also the
story of the oldest and the most
resilient culture on earth.
It is seen as an amalgamation of
indigenous and outside influences,
yet having a unique character and
distinctiveness of its own.
19. Spirals and curvaceous lines, vines and
tendrils.
Round-figured goddesses, circular amulets,
colored gemstones, arches and domes, haloed
deities, crescent moons, and the globe of the
sun.
Sculptures & paintings depict the diversity,
colour and spontaneity of the country and are
representations of the all-encompassing
nature of Indian culture.
20. Kolam designs have been tradionally handed
down to the younger generation by the elders.
Several organisations and magazines conduct
kolam exhibitions & contests to revive the
interest in traditional habits & customs.
There are enthusiasts who create fresh new
designs, but kolams are basically redrawn by
the public following the designs taught by elders
or printed in books & magazines.
21. Flourished in India from very early
periods, evident from literary sources
and also from the discovered
remnants.
Contemporary artists have kept up to
the times & excel in their modern
works, giving free expression to their
imagination & artistic liberty.
22. Can be broadly classified as the murals &
miniatures. Murals- huge works executed
the walls of solid structures.
Miniature paintings are those executed
on a very small scale on perishable
material such as paper, cloth, etc.,
Though perfected by artisans under the
various rules, not many remain today.
23. *Shiva (meaning "auspicious
one")
is a major Hindu deity,
Shiva is a yogi who has
notice of everything that
happens in the world and is
the main aspect of life.
In the Shaiva tradition of
Hinduism, Shiva is seen as
the Supreme God and has
five Important works:
creator, preserver,
Shiva mural in the destroyer, concealer, and
Kailasanatha Temple, dating
from the 8th century AD
revealer (to bless).
25. Rajasthan is one of the pioneer seats of
miniature paintings in India.
There reflects in these paintings a continuity of
the great traditions of Ajanta murals and Jain art
of Gujrat.
This initial art style is a blend of indigenous art
forms and the elements of the art traditions of
Ajanta and Gujarat.
A folio from the Dhola Maru
love-legend of Rajasthan,
Mewar, dated 1592 A.D.
26. Indian paintings traditions go back to
antiquity, as is evident from the
murals of Ajanta, Ellora and other
frescoes.
The buddist palm manuscipts, the
jain texts and the decan.
Indian painting is an old tradition in
ancient texts outlining theories of
color and anecdotal accounts
suggesting that it was common for
households to paint their doorways
or indoor rooms with guest resides.
27. Was an instrument for communicating Indian religious thought for
over 2,000 years. The manuscript was intended to preserve and
disseminate Indian sacred texts in the service of religion, as well
as the great literary epics.
28.
29. Generally confined to miniatures either
as book illustrations or as single works
to be kept in albums.
Emerged from Persian miniature
painting, with Indian Hindu, Jain, and
Buddhist influences.
Developed largely in the court of the
Mughal Empire (16th - 19th centuries),
and later spread to other Indian courts,
both Muslim and Hindu, and later Sikh.
32. Main elements are the introduction
of arches and beams, the arcuate
style of construction.
Traditional Indian building style is
trabeate, using pillars and beams
and lintels.
33. Early buildings of the Slave dynasty did not
employ true Islamic building styles and
consisted of false domes and false arches.
The introduction of true arches and true
domes start to appear, the earliest
example is the Alai Darwaza by the side of
Qutb Minar.
34. The different religious beliefs are
also reflected in the mode of
construction and architectural styles.
Islamic style incorporated many
elements from traditional Indian
style and a compound style
emanated.
Decorative brackets, balconies,
pendentive decorations, etc in the
architecture is an example in this
regard.
35. With the advent of Islam, architecture
slightly adapted to allow the traditions of
the new religion, but it remained strongly
Indian at its heart and character.
Arches and domes began to be used and the
mosque or masjid began to form part of the
landscape.
The sahn or the open courtyard for
congregational worship with the enclosing
cloisters or liwans and the sanctuary at the
Western end offered a different
architectural vocabulary.
36. The name Taj Mahal, with Taj meaning
Crown and Mahal meaning Palace, literally
means ‘Crown Palace’.
38. The other distinguishing features of
Indo-Islamic architecture are the
utilisation of kiosks (chhatris), tall
towers (minars) and half-domed double
portals.
Human worship and its representation
are not allowed in Islam, buildings and
other edifices are generally decorated
richly in geometrical and arabesque
designs.
39. These were carved on stone in low relief,
cut on plaster, painted or inlaid. The use
of lime as mortar was also a major
element distinct from the traditional
building style.
40.
41. The Vedas have many words for houses.
It appears that the main distinction was
between:
Chardis (house with a thatched roof),
Harmyam (a house of brick and stone
that had a courtyard in the middle),
and Gotra (a multi-dwelling complex
with sheds for animals).
The Rig-Veda speaks once of a palace
with 1000 doors, and twice of a palace
with 1000 columns.
42. Gained prominence during the reign of
the emperor Ashoka.
Primarily represented by three
important building types- the Chaitya
Hall (place of worship), the Vihara
(monastery) and the Stupa
(hemispherical mound for worship/
memory)
Exemplified by the magnificent caves of
Ajanta and Ellora and the monumental
Sanchi Stupa.
43. Chaitya Hall (place of worship)
Upper Left
Vihara (Monastery)
Lower Left
Stupa (Hemispherical mound
for worship)
Upper Right
44. Greek influence led the Indian
architecture of the time, especially
the rock-cut art, to fall under one of
the two categories:
the Mathura school of art which was
strictly Indian in spirit and did not
adopt from the Greek styles,
and the Gandharva school of art
which incorporated influences of the
Greek art.
45. The division of Buddhism into
Hinayana and Mahayana phases also
influenced the nature of rock-cut art,
the former being represented by
artifacts used by the Buddha, and the
latter by images of the Buddha.
Early temples were rock-cut, later
structural temples evolved. The
Kailasanatha temple at Ellora is a
good example of the former,
excavated from top to bottom out of
a massive rock face.
47. The first sculptures in the
Indian subcontinent date
back to the Indus Valley
civilization, where stone and
bronze carvings have been
discovered.
This is one of the earliest
instances of sculpture in the
world.
48. Later,
as Hinduism, Buddhism and
Jainism developed further, India
produced some of the most intricate
bronzes in the world, as well as
unrivaled temple carvings.
49. Some huge shrines, such as the one at
Ellora were not actually constructed
using blocks, but instead carved out
of rock, making them perhaps the
largest and most intricate sculptures
in the world.
Sculpture was the favoured medium
of artistic expression on the Indian
subcontinent. Indian buildings were
profusely adorned with it and indeed
are often inseparable from it.
50. The temples were carved out of 100,000 cubic yards
of rock. Stone provided an ideal building material in
a place regularly hit by monsoon rains.
51. Metal sculptures are especially favored
because of their beauty, glow, finesse and
durability.
Statues of Indian deities like
Shiva, Nataraja, Durga, Kali, Ganesha, and
Buddha Statues in various stances, along with
other secular statues have been crafted by
skilled artisans from bronze, brass, gold, silver
and more.
52. Indian sculptures were almost
invariably abstracted human
forms, used to instruct people in the
truths of the Hindu, Buddhist, or
Jain religions.
The nude was used both to
represent the body as a symbol of
spirit and to reveal the imagined
shapes of the gods.
53. Themultiple heads and arms of
sculptured Hindu divinities were
thought necessary to display the
manifold attributes of these gods’
power.
Sculpture of Hindu God, Vishnu
54. Bollywood BO=Bombay (Old Mumbai)
LLYWOOD = Hollywood (Center of
American film industry)
Bollywood film music is called filmi music
(from Hindi, meaning "of films"). Songs
from Bollywood movies are generally pre-
recorded by professional playback
singers, with the actors then lip
synching the words to the song on-
screen, often while dancing.
55. Golden Age of Indian Cinema 1940’s-
1960’s:
Following India's independence, the
period from the late 1940s to the
1960s is regarded by film historians
as the "Golden Age" of Hindi cinema.
And most of the storylines of the
movies during this era were based
on social themes concentrated on
the working-urban class life in
India.
56. isan indian composer, singer-
songwriter, record
producer, musician, multi-
instrumentalist and philanthropist.
Described as the world's most
prominent and prolific film composer
by Time Magazine.
57. Hisworks are notable for integrating
eastern classical music with electronic
music sounds, world music genres and
traditional orchestral arrangements.
Jai
Ho" (Hindi: ) (English: May
there be victory) is one of the most
notable songs written by A.R.Rahman.
This song was written for the movie
Slumdog Millionaire.