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Scent upon a Southern Breeze: The Synaesthetic Arts of the Deccan

Scent upon a Southern Breeze: The Synaesthetic Arts of the Deccan

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Author:Edited by Kavita Singh
ISBN 10:null
ISBN 13:9789383243259
Binding:Hardbound
Language:English
Year:2018
Subject:Art and Archaeology/Painting and Sculpture

About the Book

Contents Contents Scent upon a Southern Breeze: The Synaesthetic Arts of the Deccan Kavita Singh Social Stimulants: Perfuming Practices in Sultanate India Emma Flatt Perfume and Pleasure in 17th-Century Deccan Ali Akbar Husain Bidri Ware: A Fascinating Craft of the Deccan Jagdish Mittal Music, Art and Power in ‘Adil Shahi Bijapur, c. 1570–1630 Katherine Butler Schofield The Tree of Life and the World of Wonder: ‘Aja’ib Imagery on 17th-Century Kalamkaris Sylvia Houghteling Documenting the Fabulous: The ‘Aja’ib al-Makhluqat of the National Museum Preeti Bahadur Ramaswami Slave, Sultan, Scholar: Muhammad Qutb Shah and the Royal Library of Golconda Laura Weinstein Weddings and Hunts: A Visual History of Pleasure in 18th-Century Hyderabad Srinayani Lankala Index The arts of the Deccan remained understudied for a long while, possibly due to their complex and hybrid nature. This was a coveted region, and many powers fought over its control. What survives of its turbulent history allows us to reconstruct only a fragmentary record of what might have been made in the Deccan. Even in what remains, it is not always easy to put one’s finger on what is "Deccani" in Deccani art. Now, in the wake of global art history and its interest in travelling objects and hybridity, Deccani art is increasingly coming into focus. Scholars are bringing new insights to Deccani objects that bear the marks of mixed styles, trade, and even damage and reconstitution. Drawing from and going beyond the landmark 2015 symposium and exhibition Nauras: The Many Arts of the Deccan held at the National Museum, New Delhi, the essays in this volume explore the sense of wonder, 'aja'ib, that permeated textile design, manuscript illustration and perfume production in the Deccan. Through Ragamala paintings and treatises on magic, perfumery texts and garden architecture, exquisite bidri ware and kalamkaris, the volume shows the way objects and texts can yield an understanding of how beauty was experienced in the past not just through visual means but through sound and smell as well. The book breaks new ground for a sensory turn in Indian art history. Visual objects