Sitewide 20% festive discount
 PA02: Courtesan - Kalighat Painting
All Items from Folk Art Paintings »   Click to view items which match PA02

Courtesan - Kalighat Painting

 
PA02: Courtesan - Kalighat Painting
[ Kalighat Painting - Water Color on Paper - Unframed ]
18 inches x 11.5 inches
US $10.00 US $8.00
[ Free Shipping Worldwide ]
This item is already sold
Click to add this item to your list of favorites

Click to recommend this item to a friend

This is a depiction of a 19th century courtesan from Bengal, with her pet bird and a rose.

Kalighat paintings
As colonial British rule in India disintegrated the rural fabric of the early 19th century Bengal, people from the villages started migrating to the then political capital of the British, Calcutta (now rechristened, Kolkata). Simultaneously, traditional schools of art and painting like the Mughal school and various traditional Hindu schools of painting were beginning to lose patronage, partly because of the perceived lack of political strength of the local ruling class in India. It was then that this local form of paintings took shape, trying to tap the vaccum in the world of art in Bengal.
The rural populace who had migrated to Calcutta settled around a place called Kalighat, which was named so because of the famous and highly revered Kali temple that stood there. They had brought with them the rustic styles of folk art and their paintings quickly caught the imagination of the people of those times. This form of paintings came to be known as Kalighat paintings. They were made with bold sweeping brushstrokes with shading.
Initially Kalighat paintings were limited to using Hindu religious subjects for themes. Hindu Gods and Goddesses dominated the majority of these paintings. However with time, contemporary social and political topics found their way into Kalighat paintings through the use of satire in these paintings. The medium used for these paintings also changed with time as paper replaced cloth as the primary medium for Kalighat paintings.
The fortunes of Kalighat school of paintings (as well as the Kalighat painters) rose and fell with time. The initial popularity of this form of art during the colonial rule in India, ascribed to the ethnicity associated with them which so blatantly countered western forms of art, gave way to neglect by scholars of art since they had no linkages to the sacred texts of Hinduism and thus had no "sanctity". Kalighat paintings, and many other such folk-based forms of art were neglected. However, later, in the beginning of the 20th century, did the importance of folk art in the identity of a nation's culture and art sink in, since when Kalighat paintings have been given the importance they deserve and their revival has been looked into with seriousness.
Free Shipping Worldwide
Register to enjoy special discounts
Matching Items
You might be interested in these items to match the one you are viewing
more matching items »
Sohni Mahiwal
Sohni Mahiwal
Egyptian Queen
Egyptian Queen
Dancing Doll
Dancing Doll
Elegance
Elegance
more matching items »
Testimonials
I wish to thank you very much for this well-written article. I have been reading web site after web site to gain information on Ganesha and your one article has given me more understanding than all...
Orese Fahey
Read all testimonials »
American Express MasterCard
Visa Discover

Random Art Pages: Tibetan Statues - Wood Sculptures - Jagannath Subhadra Balaram - Shola Pith Arts - Indian Sculptures - Thermocol Cutting - Designer Doll - Land Scape Paintings - Stone Craft - Papier Mache Statues from India 


Copyright © 2008, Dolls Of India
Site designed and maintained by UnlimitedFX