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Catalogue >Oriental Art >  In The Realm Of Gods And Kings


In The Realm Of Gods And Kings In The Realm Of Gods And Kings

Edited by Andrew Topsfield

This volume celebrates the wealth and diversity of the arts of India created for the life of courts and temples from 1000 BC to the twentieth century.

Each work is fully illustrated and most of these works have not been previously published. The book also includes short background essays describing aspects of Indian life related to the works.

This book accompanies an exhibiton of selections from the Polsky Collection and the Metropolitan Museum at the Asia Society, New York. http://www.asiasociety.org

"...includes contributions from leading London, New York and Oxford experts."

New World, December 2004

416 pages / 240 x 280 mm / 250 colour illustrations / hardback

ISBN 0 85667 593 8 | Retail price £30.00 


[View sample pages in PDF format]


Online price: £22.00 / €33.00


This volume celebrates the wealth and diversity of the arts of India created for the life of courts and temples from 1000 BC to the twentieth century. Paintings, objects and photographs, ranging in date from the second century BC to the late twentieth century, reflect the variety and continuity of India’s aesthetic traditions.

Andrew Topsfield, the editor, has contributed background essays describing aspects of Indian life related to the themes explored in the book: The Sacred Realm: Nature, Temple, Gods, Goddesses, Saint and Sadhus; The Court: Courtly Life, The Hunt, Royal Portraits, Couples and Women, Courtly Manuscripts.

Catalogue entries by experts in the field comment on narrative episodes from the epics, iconographic symbolism, religious, as well as social and contextual references related to the works shown. An extensive and authoritative essay by Dr. Vishakha Desai, ‘The Experience of Creativity in Indian Art’, is included as well as an essay by Cynthia Hazen Polsky, ‘To Beckon the Modern Eye’.

The General Editor and contributor, Andrew Topsfield, is head of the Indian Department at the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. Other contributors include Dr Vishakha Desai, Director of the Museum, Asia Society, New York, Dr Navina Haidar, Asst. Curator, Department of Islamic Art, Metropolitan Museum, Jeremia P. Losty and John Falconer of the British Library, Michael Spink F.G.A., Consultant in Indian and Islamic Art, John Eskenazi, Terry McInerney. and Martin Lerner, Curator, Department of Asian Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art.