Fine Craftsmanship

Published to accompany an exhibition at The Museum Rietberg, Zurich, 30 November 2010 – 10 April 2011.

MUGHAL AND DECCANI PAINTINGS: The Eva and Konrad Seitz Collection of Indian Miniatures

156 pages, hardback, 300 x 260 mm, over 60 colour illustrations
PRICE: £42.00
ISBN: 978 3 907077 48 1

 

Customers in the US or Canada, CLICK HERE

 

John Seyller with Konrad Seitz

The collection of Konrad and Eva Seitz is one of the most important private collections of Indian paintings in Europe. Accompanying an exhibition at The Museum Rietberg, this catalogue of 60 works provides an excellent survey of Indian painting from 1575–1850 in two of the most important production areas of painting: at the court of the north Indian Mughal rulers and at the ateliers in the Deccan further south, an area of Indian painting which has hitherto received far less attention. The works present a wide variety of styles and themes and invite for close examination.

The Mughals had a profound influence on the politics and culture of northern India for some 300 years, and this only ended in 1858 when the last Mughal emperor was sent into exile by the British colonial government. During this period the country was politically reunited for the first time since the early Indian kingdoms. When the Mughals first came to power in northern India, they brought with them a rich artistic tradition from their Persian roots. Emperor Akbar (r.1556–1605) established painting workshops at his court for which he recruited not only artists who were of Persian origin or Muslims but also Indian painters with their own traditions. Although the workshops were scaled down under Akbar’s successors Jahangir (r. 1605–1627) and Shah Jahan (r. 1628–1658), the artistic skills of the painters and the Mughal style continued to develop and reached a point of exquisite perfection. The naturalistic style of the painting and the impressive portraits of nobles and rulers reflect not only the artists’ mastery of detailed observation but also their endeavour to create historical records for posterity. Apart from these secular, courtly themes, mythological and European motifs testify to the imperial splendour of the Mughal period and the artistic openness of the painters. The composition of the collection vividly illustrates the thematic diversity of Mughal painting from its beginnings to the end of this period.

The exhibition also shows how painting flourished at the same time in the Deccan region further south, a subject to which little attention has been devoted until now. The principalities which emerged from the Delhi sultanate remained independent for a long time. In their own workshops, a very distinct style emerged which initially was very different from that of Mughal courts but later also integrated elements from Mughal painting. The paintings are characterised especially by their vivid colour palette and idealised representations. A fascinating lyrical evocation of atmosphere and emotion can be found in portraits of rulers and scenes from everyday life at court, and especially in the ragamalas, paintings that relate to Indian musical forms.

More than fifty paintings, originally created for a very small and select audience, can now be viewed by the wider public.


For other titles of similar subject, CLICK HERE



Only Fittings: Japanese Sword Furniture from an Old English Collection

This book examines how with the Japanese craftsman's intuitive sense of aesthetics and design the tsuba's utilitarian origins reached into the realms of fine art. The collection paints a picture of the Japanese tsubako, successfully representing both classic and everyday tsuba and fittings, work of the exacting levels demanded by the Daimyo and their samurai. More

Eccentrics in Netsuke

There is an excitement to eccentric netsuke, and a dimension of an artistic personality and vision which raises these creations from the level of craft to art. The simple fact is that individual, experimental netsuke are much more difficult to understand than identifiable hack work – even great hack work – and are therefore much more gratifying when one does understand them. More

Escape from the Dusty World: Chinese Paintings and Literati Works of Art

Literati material finds its way into parts of the brain which regular works of antiquity cannot reach; the convoluted twists of cunning poetic allusions, themselves referring back and further back, to old writings, inscriptions on stone, legendary heroes and their mottoes, and not infrequent misquotes, can catch the unwary seeker after meaning in their complex web, causing him to lose all sense of afternoons and sometimes days. While one can admire Chinese literati works for their purely visual appeal and intimate, personable presence, it is their literary content that renders them so endlessly individual and subjective of interpretation. More

Odd Men Out: Unique Works of Art by Individualist Japanese Artists

This book explores the surprising heights of the idiosyncratic lone Japanese artist, the odd man out, experimenting his way through the fine arts and laying his own pathway forwards as he did. It is intended as a joyous celebration of his genius. Dating from the late 17th to the early 20th century, 69 special and individual works of painting, sculpture, ceramic, lacquer, fancy metalwork and a striking selection of pipecases and their sagemono, inro and netsuke in various materials, are catalogued with beautiful photography and detailed descriptions. More

Images in Light: Stained Glass 1200–1500

Stained glass was unknown in antiquity. Invented around AD 1000, it soon achieved a dominant position in the arts of the Middle Ages, not only in churches but also in secular contexts. Its innovation can be compared with that of television – and like television it involves passing light through a transparent layer, using the light of sun instead of light generated by electricity, so that in a real sense the stained glass image is in constant motion, as the light passing through it changes. More

The Noble Art of the Sword: Fashion and Fencing in Renaissance Europe 1520–1630

Since the early Bronze Age the sword has been a sign of wealth, status and the power of divine right. Yet, before the sixteenth century the sword was almost never carried on the person in everyday life. It was a rare, noble weapon, carried into battle by the aristocratic warrior class but set aside in time of peace. However, the increasing prominence of the Renaissance middle classes brought a fundamental change to the sword's place in society. Now large numbers of non-noble but often wealthy and upwardly mobile people could also afford rich things like fine clothes, jewelry and weapons. More

More Things: In Heaven and Earth

Made from scraps and slivers of wood, ivory, bone, stag-antler and metal, netsuke developed from a simple utilitarian toggle worn at the belt into a fine art. Some of it made geniuses. This book brings together prime examples of these delightful treasures – a rare and perfectly formed horse by Masanao of Kyoto; an extraordinary Ashinaga and Tenaga by Totenko; a fine study of a running boar with a snake upon its back, a masterpiece by Naito Toyomasa. More

Scultura

After more than 15 years in business Tomasso Brothers are delighted to be hosting their spectacular debut sculpture exhibtion at Adam Williams Fine Art, New York. To mark this seminal exhibition of more than 40 important works they have produced a luxurious catalogue, which aims to represent and describe the sculptures through sophisticated photographs and informative catalogue descriptions. More

Japanese Netsuke: Serious Art: Outstanding Works Selected from American Collections

A comprehensive survey of the major schools and masters in 66 fine examples, this catalogue is an indication of the developing serious interest in netsuke. Several full-colour photographs of each work, taken from every useful angle, accompany educative and entertaining text. More

The Literati Mode: Chinese Scholar Paintings, Calligraphy and Desk Objects

The third and last in the series of catalogues and exhibitions on the endlessly diverse subject of artworks which reflect the culture of the Chinese scholar class and some of the individuals who comprised it. It follows on the heels of Documentary Chinese Works of Art in Scholars' Taste and Emperor Scholar Artisan Monk. Over 160 fine examples of painting, calligraphy and desk or scholastic objects, dating from the 15th to the 20th century, are presented with colour photographs and detailed, educative entries. More

Ship Models in the Thomson Collection at the Art Gallery of Ontario

Spanning some 350 years, the Thomson Collection of historic ship models contains examples of exquisite workmanship and some of the masterpieces of the genre. Pride of the collection are the rare British dockyard models made to scale for affluent 18th-century clients closely associated with the Navy. More

Turkish Bookbinding in the 15th Century: The Foundation of an Ottoman Court Style

Produced for the Association Internationale de Bibliophilie, this book traces the development of the early Ottoman style under influence from their neighbours; the impact of the patronage of Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror; and the development of the ‘classical’ style under his successor Bayezid II. A catalogue section provides beautiful illustrations of 41 masterpieces of bookbinding; with technical appendices, bibliography, concordance and index. More

Masterpieces of European Arms and Armour in the Wallace Collection

Described by The Times as a “watershed between past and future of that most magnificent of publishing beasts, the academic catalogue … as beautifully presented and generously illustrated as it is well researched”, this book draws attention to a selection of the most refined and tantalizing pieces or arms and armour from one of the most significant collections of its kind. More