|
|
Browse Category >
Crafts
>
Delight In Design |
|
Delight In Design |
Indian Silver for the Raj |
|
|
|
by Vidya Dehejia
|
A richly illustrated volume that focuses on the silverware
produced during the British Raj.
More
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
IN STOCK |
241 x
292 mm |
9.5 x
11.5 in
Hardcover |
224 pages
219 colour photographs |
|
ISBN:
978-81-89995-19-5 (Mapin)
978-0-944142-43-1
(Grantha)?
What is Grantha?
Mapin books are jointly published and distributed in the US, UK and Europe through our US-based partner, Grantha Corporation. All Mapin books carry a Grantha ISBN for the ease of ordering through our respective distributors in this region. Customers in the regions mentioned above should use the Grantha ISBN for reference while looking for our books in bookstores, online stores and libraries.
|
|
PRICE:
Rs.2,750.00 | $65.00 | £42.00
| €49.00 |
|
SPECIAL OFFER:
Discount on online purchase |
|
|
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
|
|
- |
|
|
|
Table of contents |
Sample Pages | Reviews
Table
of contents
-
Whose Taste? Colonial Design, International Exhibitions, and Indian Silver
-
‘Designs to Suit Every Taste:’ P. Orr & Sons and Swami Silverware
-
A Cache Uncovered : Workshop Drawings of Oomersee Mawjee & Sons of Kutch
-
‘A House of Wonder:’ Silver at the Delhi Durbar Exhibition of 1903
-
Testimonial Plate : Swashbuckling Silver
-
Catalog
-
The Calling Card and the Ritual of the Call
-
Tea and the Tea Service
-
Regional Styles of Silverware
Madras and Swami Silver
Kutch Embossed Silverware
Kashmir Silver: The ‘Paisley,’ and the Chinar Leaf
Lucknow Silver: The Jungle, and the Hunt
Alwar’s Brief Experiment
Calcutta Silver and Rural Scenes
Burmese Silver: The Jatakas and Ramayana
Bombay’s Assorted Silver Styles
|
|
 |
|
|
Selected Images |
|
|
|
Delight in Design is a richly illustrated volume that focuses on the remarkable ornamented silverware produced by Indian craftsmen during the period of the British Raj. Silversmiths created elegant silver tea services, bowls, wine and water ewers, beer mugs, and goblets to adorn the sideboard or mantelpiece in a British Raj home, creating European forms fulfilling European requirements.
These same silversmiths then adopted a unique manner of embellishing these objects with a variety of different motifs that reflect local taste and carry a recognizably local pattern.
This book carries a set of five essays that explore different facets of the production and consumption of Indian silver for the Raj. It considers the silverware in terms of its clearly distinguishable regional styles, which is prefaced by two thematic sections, one on calling card cases and the other on tea services, which demonstrate its wide prevalence. The visual presentation of the silverware does justice to it dazzling quality.
About the Author
Vidya Dehejia holds the Barbara Stoler Miller Chair in Indian Art at Columbia University, New York.
With contributions from Wynyard Wilkinson is the author of four books on silver. Yuthika Sharma and Dipti Khera are doctoral candidates in the Department of Art History and Archaeology, Columbia University, New York.
|
|
The book was published in conjunction with an exhibition that opened at the Miriam & Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery, Columbia University, New York, in September 2008.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Praise |
"Deeply researched, engagingly written, handsomely produced, it focuses on the amazing silverware produced by Indian craftsmen for a European clientele during the British Raj."
—Holland Cotter, New York Times
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
OTHER TITLES OF INTEREST |
by Stephen P Huyler
a documentation of contemporary potters and their
techniques of production, exploring comparisons of
those of ancient India.
|
|
by Thomas Holbein Hendley
The facsimile edition of a rare copy that documents the
exquisite objects presented at the Jeypore Exhibition of
1883.
|
|
by Aga Khan Trust for Culture
Catalogues the systems, tools, techniques, process and
benefits of hand-crafting stone elements for conservation
purposes.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|