
このアートワークの写真をもっと見たい場合はお知らせください。
- 仕事の裏側 / 仕事の側面
- 細部 / 署名 / アートワークの表面またはテクスチャ
- アートワーク イン シチュエーション, その他...
santhal Pattachitra -16 (2001) 絵画 Minmoy Das によって
詳細情報
- 包装 (チューブ) すべてのアートワークは、慎重に保護され、保険がかけられたプレミアムキャリアで出荷されます。
- モニタリング 購入者への引き渡しまでのご注文の追跡. 追跡番号が提供されるので、リアルタイムで荷物を追跡できます。
- 遅らせる 3〜7日で世界中に配達 (見積もり)
- 税関は含まれていません 価格には通関手数料は含まれていません。ほとんどの国ではオリジナルのアートワークに輸入税はありませんが、減額されたVATを支払う必要がある場合があります。通関手数料(ある場合)は、到着時に税関が計算し、運送業者が別途請求します。
詳細情報
- 追跡可能なオンラインCertificateof Authenticity 真正性証明書は、アートワークコードをスキャンすることにより、いつでもオンラインで確認できます。
- 認証評価のアーティスト 専門家は芸術家の仕事やキャリアを研究し、その後独立し、信頼性の平均価格の値を設定する。平均価格の値は、一定期間の価格帯でのアーティストsituates。専門家はまた、特定の作業のためのより正確な見積もりを確立するために求められることがあります。
詳細情報
SSL証明書と100%安全な支払い + 3D Secure.
詳細情報
-
オリジナルのアートワーク (One Of A Kind)
絵画,
紙の
水彩画
- 寸法 高さ 7.5in, 幅 5.5in
- カテゴリ 絵画 $500未満 部族芸術 舞台芸術
Jamini Roy of the Bengal school, who, like many of his peers, understood the formal qualities, was the first among his peers to recognize the vitality of the myths and nature mysticism inherent in so called primitive and folk art. And he forged ahead visualizing valid alternatives in this art to mainstream western are introduced in the colonial period. A post modern and a contemporary artist in this age, he brought the Vaishnavite, Baul and Santal traditions visibility and precision in the world of art.
The Santhals are a tribe spread over the region of present day Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal states of the Indian subcontinent. Like any other tribe the Santals have an exclusive artistic perception rooted in their cultural traditions and physical environs.
The Santhals paint the walls of their huts during their village festival for ceremonial celebratory performances as also for self expression. They worship a stone, as a formless representation of the Divine, sing of the burthen of their life and provide a vivid portrayal of their day to day experiences, shared by animals and birds.
Done in primary colors, infested with leafy patterns in the foreground, background and borders, the Santhal paintings are characterized by a directness and a child like simplicity in the depiction of birds, animals and insects. The figures are static, frequently multicolor, artistic rather than realistic projections. Bodies of fish and birds are joined in one head. Mother and child as well as human, animal and bird couples are brought together by a philosophy of love and unions. A panoramic view of the village forms the backdrop, with women carrying firewood and water, men driving the bullock cart to the market, dancing and singing under a tree, a couple under flowering creepers; a family going for cultivation; men and women cutting wood, gathering fire wood, carrying water on the head; hunters returning with their catch ; fishing; taking mud pots in a cart to the village market for sale, flying kites and swinging, brothers of the bridegroom carrying the bride in a basket. These tell of the strong family bond and brimming with life diffusing a rare energy that animates Santhal art.
The colour scheme holds no logic. A bird or a fish appear in many colours. The picture is first drawn in black and then coloured. Originally, the Santhals used natural colours made from plants and stones, with a special and striking tinge. The older generation still sticks to natural colours while the young opt for synthetic colours. There also black and white paintings on canvas presented for archives or for sale today.
Santiniketan, a centre of excellence for Indian art, is associated with the iconic figure of Rabindranath Tagore, worldwide. The art of the Santhals gained prominence during his days Tagore got interested in the Santhals living in a hamlet close to Santiniketan and began to promote their art when he came across Nandalal Basu and appointed him as art teacher in Kala Bhavan. From this context arose an interest in folk arts and traditional crafts in Santiniketan and Sreeniketan. Soon an artist’s colony was established in 1930 near Santiniketan with Ramkinkar Baij, the Santhal painter and sculptor as one of its founding members. Today, those who visit Santiniketan come back with Ramkinkar indelibly etched in their memories.
Forms of arts change from age to age according to changing outlook, circumstances, methods and techniques. But folk art is brought into form in fidelity to natural and biological laws, operating within ethnological and geographical parameters. Today Santhal artists paint on canvases using acrylic for exhibitions and for sale although the older generation still sticks to their special colours obtained from plants, mud and other raw materials. The simplicity, virility and vitality of Santhal paintings, emerging from natural environs provide a fine chapter in the history of Indian arts, and needs to be sedulously nurtured.
関連テーマ
Tribal ArtFolk ArtIndian Folk ArtIndian Tribal ArtIndian Folk And Tribal Art