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Category/分类:艺术
亚马逊评级: 亚马逊评级 FLORA INDICA: RECOVERING LOST STORIES FROM KEW’S INDIAN DRAWINGS
  Book ID/图书代码:07496025C00080
 
页数: 224 定价: 0美元 上传日期: 2025-11-14

English Summary/英文概要: For the first time, Kew’s recovered collections of Indian botanical art are brought together with the remarkable stories of the artists who painted them, the colonial context in which they were made, and their essential role in the development of botanical knowledge.

Featuring a representative selection of one hundred artworks from the previously fractured, uncatalogued, and largely inaccessible collection of over seven thousand Indian illustrations in Kew’s archives, Flora Indica foregrounds the vital role of Indian artists in helping to advance both scientific knowledge and the aesthetics of botanical art.

The botanical watercolors, created between 1790 and 1850, were commissioned by British botanists, many of whom were employed by the East India Company to document India’s rich plant diversity. The text by leading expert Henry Noltie reveals the lost stories of how these illustrations came to be, exploring the work of twenty Indian artists from eleven collections, with nineteen named individuals and thirty previously unseen illustrations. Noltie’s extensive research into these hidden histories features plants native to South Asia alongside exotics introduced from the then-emerging international network of botanical gardens, taking readers on a journey that explores the environments in which these master artists worked. The style of the works represents a unique fusion of traditional Indian artistry and techniques with botanists’ demands for naturalism and scientific specificity from an Indo-British perspective.

Presented with a foreword by art historian William Dalrymple, Flora Indica illuminates Kew’s beautiful Indian botanical art collection, through which readers are invited to discover the important lost histories of Indian botanical art from the age of empire.


About the Author/作者介绍: Henry Noltie worked at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh as a taxonomist, curator, and historian of its Indian collections. He specialized in the botanical drawings made by Indian artists for Scottish East India Company surgeons, on which he curated a series of exhibitions in the Garden’s Inverleith House gallery. He has written lavishly illustrated monographs on the collections commissioned by Alexander Gibson in the Bombay Presidency and by Robert Wight and Hugh Cleghorn in the Madras Presidency. He is a research associate of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh and the Natural History Museum, London.

Prabuddha Dasgupta is a self-taught photographer and the author of Women and Ladakh. He received the Yves Saint Laurent grant for photography in 1991, and his work is in the collections of many institutions, including Museo Ken Damy and Galleria Carla Sozzani. William Dalrymple divides his time between London and Delhi. His other books include In Xanadu, City of Djinns, which won the 1994 Thomas Cook Travel Book Award and the Sunday Times Young British Writer of the Year Award, The Age of Kali, and The Last Mughal.

 
  Format:
 
Rights Status/版权销售情况:Simplified Chinese/简体中文:AVAILABLE
                               Complex/Traditional Chinese/繁体中文:AVAILABLE
 
Sales in other countries/其他国家销售情况:
 
原文第一章内容:暂无 手稿:暂无 大纲:暂无
 
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