Partha Mitter - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by Partha Mitter

Research paper thumbnail of Review: Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture, Vol. I, Parts 1 and 2, South India, Lower Drāviḍadēśa, 200 BC-AD 1324 by Michael W. Meister, M. A. Dhaky

Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Oct 1, 1985

Research paper thumbnail of Postcolonial Monsters: A Conversation with Partha Mitter

Research paper thumbnail of Sunayani Devi

Oxford Art Online, Jan 12, 2018

Research paper thumbnail of Indian Art

Research paper thumbnail of Colonial Modern

Routledge eBooks, Apr 27, 2018

Research paper thumbnail of Interventions. Décentrer le modernisme : histoire de l’art et avant-garde considérés depuis la périphérie

Éditions du Centre Pompidou eBooks, Feb 16, 2022

Research paper thumbnail of Sikander, Shahzia

Oxford University Press eBooks, Sep 20, 2006

Research paper thumbnail of Art and nationalism in colonial India, 1850-1922

... 61 30. Ethnographic drawings by Calcutta students (Government Art College, Calcutta) 62 31. K... more ... 61 30. Ethnographic drawings by Calcutta students (Government Art College, Calcutta) 62 31. Kundanlal Mistri: Begging Forgiveness, 1897 (Andrew Topsfield, The Ashmolean Museum, Oxford) 64 32. Ravi Varma: Sairindhri ...

Research paper thumbnail of The Triumph of Modernism: India's Artists and the Avant-Garde, 1922-1947

Page 1. The Triumph of Modernism India's artists and the avant-garde 1922-1947 P... more Page 1. The Triumph of Modernism India's artists and the avant-garde 1922-1947 Partha Mitter i Page 2. Page 3. Page 4. Page 5. Page 6. This richly illustrated book explores the contested history oI art and nationalism in the tumultuous last decades of British rule in India. ...

Research paper thumbnail of Western Orientalism and the Construction of Nationalist Art in India

Research paper thumbnail of The Artful Pose : Early Studio Photography in Mumbai C. 1855-1940

Research paper thumbnail of Mukherjee, Mrinalini

Oxford Art Online, Oct 20, 2006

Research paper thumbnail of Punch and Indian Cartoons: The Reception of a Transnational Phenomenon

Asian Punches, 2012

As the title makes clear, the thrust of my argument relates to colonial India, which is my own pa... more As the title makes clear, the thrust of my argument relates to colonial India, which is my own particular field of study. I take up the story of Punch’s progress and spread throughout the subcontinent. Punch was turned into an effective weapon of political resistance and social criticism by the Indian followers of the English magazine in a way not envisaged by its creators. Yet this is not the entire story. Punch exemplifies the wider question of how a concept or technology originating in one culture undergoes transformations of meaning and inflection subsequent to its introduction in a culturally different society. This perennial question assumes special urgency during the high tide of imperialism, which represents the first great phase of globalisation. Therefore, in order to pose general questions about the nature and mechanism of transfers of ideas and technologies across cultures, and their impact on those who receive them, one needs to shift the discussion over to the debate on globalisation. The urgency of this debate is underscored by the concern of this publication to discuss Punch as a transcultural phenomenon. Within this remit, my own analysis is informed by the fact that while post-colonial studies have led the field in uncovering the Western agenda in its analysis of the world colonial order, recent critics have recognised the need for greater nuances in studies of the period of high imperialism. As a new publication puts it in its study of the period 1880s–1940s, a period that includes the career of Punch:

Research paper thumbnail of Rabindranath Tagore and Okakura Tenshin in Calcutta

Research paper thumbnail of What’s Wrong with Global Art?

Art and Globalization, 2015

Research paper thumbnail of The Paradox of Ernst H. Gombrich

Research paper thumbnail of In Search of the Global Impact of Asian Aesthetics on American Art and Material Culture

This project is co-directed by Vimalin Rujivacharakul (Department of Art History, University of D... more This project is co-directed by Vimalin Rujivacharakul (Department of Art History, University of Delaware) and J.Ritchie Garrison (Winterthur Program in American Material Culture, University of Delaware). The following videos are from the events taken place at Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library, October 12-14, 2018. (https://sites.udel.edu/globalaestheticasiaamerica/) How do design ideas, patterns, and aesthetics travel across the globe, even when objects themselves do not? This project’s question grew out of a string of provocative inquiries that emerged following exhibitions and recent projects that our alumni and faculty members of the University of Delaware have worked on over the past 10 years (Collecting China [UD-Winterthur, DE], Asia in Amsterdam [PEM, MA], Made for the Americas [MFA Boston, MA], among others). While existing scholarship has recognized the global circulation of objects, artistic forms in the American field sometimes have less to do with the mobility of act...

Research paper thumbnail of Jamini Roy

Art/Histories in Transcultural Dynamics, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of Sublime and Picturesque: The Landscape of Regret: Sarah Tiffin, Southeast Asia in Ruins: Art and Empire in the Early 19th Century, Singapore, National University of Singapore Press et Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 2016

Arts asiatiques, 2019

Mitter Partha. Sublime and Picturesque: The Landscape of Regret: Sarah Tiffin, Southeast Asia in ... more Mitter Partha. Sublime and Picturesque: The Landscape of Regret: Sarah Tiffin, Southeast Asia in Ruins: Art and Empire in the Early 19th Century, Singapore, National University of Singapore Press et Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 2016. In: Arts asiatiques, tome 74, 2019. pp. 177-180

Research paper thumbnail of Rabindranath Tagore as Artist: A Legend in His Own Time?

Rabindranath Tagore, 1989

I shall not dwell much on the style and quality of Tagore’s paintings. Instead I would like to be... more I shall not dwell much on the style and quality of Tagore’s paintings. Instead I would like to begin with a passage that Professor K. G. Subramanyan once wrote: To most of my generation, talking about Tagore does not come easy. Because to us Rabindranath was more than just a person. He was to us a compelling symbol, a symbol of India’s cultural regeneration. For me personally, and I presume for a number of Indian artists, the work of Rabindranath came like a breath of fresh air.1

Research paper thumbnail of Review: Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture, Vol. I, Parts 1 and 2, South India, Lower Drāviḍadēśa, 200 BC-AD 1324 by Michael W. Meister, M. A. Dhaky

Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Oct 1, 1985

Research paper thumbnail of Postcolonial Monsters: A Conversation with Partha Mitter

Research paper thumbnail of Sunayani Devi

Oxford Art Online, Jan 12, 2018

Research paper thumbnail of Indian Art

Research paper thumbnail of Colonial Modern

Routledge eBooks, Apr 27, 2018

Research paper thumbnail of Interventions. Décentrer le modernisme : histoire de l’art et avant-garde considérés depuis la périphérie

Éditions du Centre Pompidou eBooks, Feb 16, 2022

Research paper thumbnail of Sikander, Shahzia

Oxford University Press eBooks, Sep 20, 2006

Research paper thumbnail of Art and nationalism in colonial India, 1850-1922

... 61 30. Ethnographic drawings by Calcutta students (Government Art College, Calcutta) 62 31. K... more ... 61 30. Ethnographic drawings by Calcutta students (Government Art College, Calcutta) 62 31. Kundanlal Mistri: Begging Forgiveness, 1897 (Andrew Topsfield, The Ashmolean Museum, Oxford) 64 32. Ravi Varma: Sairindhri ...

Research paper thumbnail of The Triumph of Modernism: India's Artists and the Avant-Garde, 1922-1947

Page 1. The Triumph of Modernism India's artists and the avant-garde 1922-1947 P... more Page 1. The Triumph of Modernism India's artists and the avant-garde 1922-1947 Partha Mitter i Page 2. Page 3. Page 4. Page 5. Page 6. This richly illustrated book explores the contested history oI art and nationalism in the tumultuous last decades of British rule in India. ...

Research paper thumbnail of Western Orientalism and the Construction of Nationalist Art in India

Research paper thumbnail of The Artful Pose : Early Studio Photography in Mumbai C. 1855-1940

Research paper thumbnail of Mukherjee, Mrinalini

Oxford Art Online, Oct 20, 2006

Research paper thumbnail of Punch and Indian Cartoons: The Reception of a Transnational Phenomenon

Asian Punches, 2012

As the title makes clear, the thrust of my argument relates to colonial India, which is my own pa... more As the title makes clear, the thrust of my argument relates to colonial India, which is my own particular field of study. I take up the story of Punch’s progress and spread throughout the subcontinent. Punch was turned into an effective weapon of political resistance and social criticism by the Indian followers of the English magazine in a way not envisaged by its creators. Yet this is not the entire story. Punch exemplifies the wider question of how a concept or technology originating in one culture undergoes transformations of meaning and inflection subsequent to its introduction in a culturally different society. This perennial question assumes special urgency during the high tide of imperialism, which represents the first great phase of globalisation. Therefore, in order to pose general questions about the nature and mechanism of transfers of ideas and technologies across cultures, and their impact on those who receive them, one needs to shift the discussion over to the debate on globalisation. The urgency of this debate is underscored by the concern of this publication to discuss Punch as a transcultural phenomenon. Within this remit, my own analysis is informed by the fact that while post-colonial studies have led the field in uncovering the Western agenda in its analysis of the world colonial order, recent critics have recognised the need for greater nuances in studies of the period of high imperialism. As a new publication puts it in its study of the period 1880s–1940s, a period that includes the career of Punch:

Research paper thumbnail of Rabindranath Tagore and Okakura Tenshin in Calcutta

Research paper thumbnail of What’s Wrong with Global Art?

Art and Globalization, 2015

Research paper thumbnail of The Paradox of Ernst H. Gombrich

Research paper thumbnail of In Search of the Global Impact of Asian Aesthetics on American Art and Material Culture

This project is co-directed by Vimalin Rujivacharakul (Department of Art History, University of D... more This project is co-directed by Vimalin Rujivacharakul (Department of Art History, University of Delaware) and J.Ritchie Garrison (Winterthur Program in American Material Culture, University of Delaware). The following videos are from the events taken place at Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library, October 12-14, 2018. (https://sites.udel.edu/globalaestheticasiaamerica/) How do design ideas, patterns, and aesthetics travel across the globe, even when objects themselves do not? This project’s question grew out of a string of provocative inquiries that emerged following exhibitions and recent projects that our alumni and faculty members of the University of Delaware have worked on over the past 10 years (Collecting China [UD-Winterthur, DE], Asia in Amsterdam [PEM, MA], Made for the Americas [MFA Boston, MA], among others). While existing scholarship has recognized the global circulation of objects, artistic forms in the American field sometimes have less to do with the mobility of act...

Research paper thumbnail of Jamini Roy

Art/Histories in Transcultural Dynamics, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of Sublime and Picturesque: The Landscape of Regret: Sarah Tiffin, Southeast Asia in Ruins: Art and Empire in the Early 19th Century, Singapore, National University of Singapore Press et Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 2016

Arts asiatiques, 2019

Mitter Partha. Sublime and Picturesque: The Landscape of Regret: Sarah Tiffin, Southeast Asia in ... more Mitter Partha. Sublime and Picturesque: The Landscape of Regret: Sarah Tiffin, Southeast Asia in Ruins: Art and Empire in the Early 19th Century, Singapore, National University of Singapore Press et Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 2016. In: Arts asiatiques, tome 74, 2019. pp. 177-180

Research paper thumbnail of Rabindranath Tagore as Artist: A Legend in His Own Time?

Rabindranath Tagore, 1989

I shall not dwell much on the style and quality of Tagore’s paintings. Instead I would like to be... more I shall not dwell much on the style and quality of Tagore’s paintings. Instead I would like to begin with a passage that Professor K. G. Subramanyan once wrote: To most of my generation, talking about Tagore does not come easy. Because to us Rabindranath was more than just a person. He was to us a compelling symbol, a symbol of India’s cultural regeneration. For me personally, and I presume for a number of Indian artists, the work of Rabindranath came like a breath of fresh air.1