Cheap/Free resources:
Wkipedia:
Wikipedia of Indian Art: I'll recommend reading the subtopics from bottom up; it seems more relevant that way!
Wikipedia of Indian Painting: once you go through this article you should further look into whichever style you like, and learn it in depth. It also has links to vernacular art.
Rasa: the classical theory of Indian aesthetics
From Archive.Org (maybe scholarly and/or illustrative. In case illustrations are not there, simply Google them for reference):
Stone Age Painting in India by Romert Brooks
The arts of India from prehistoric to modern times by Ajit Mookerji (If you have no idea about Indian arts, START HERE; it's a short book full of illustrations)
Rajput painting : romantic, divine and courtly art from India by Ahluwalia, Roda
Indian Painting by C Sivaramamurti
South Indian Paintings by C Sivaramamurti
Approach to nature in Indian art and thought by C Sivaramamurti
[There are many books on Indian art, architecture and sculpture by C Sivaramamurti on Archive.org. It's basically a goldmine.]
Kalighat : Indian popular painting, 1800-1930 by Balraj Khanna
Art of modern India by Balrak Khanna [Again, you can check out other titles by Khanna.]
Indian Textiles by John Gillow
Traditional Indian Textiles by John Gillow
South-Indian images of gods and goddesses by HK Sastri
Myths and symbols in Indian art and civilization by Heinrich Zimmer (no illustrations)
The art of Indian Asia, its mythology and transformations by Heinrich Zimmer (with illustrations)
History of Indian and Indonesian art by Ananda Coomaraswamy
A Concise History of Indian Art by Roy C Craven
Deccani Painting by Mark Zebrowski
Indian Folk Art by Heinz Mode; Subodh Chandra
Women of India by Otto Rothfeld (this isn't about art but has few informative illustrations on regional costumes of women)
Dress And Ornaments In Ancient India by Mohini Verma and Keya Bawa
Classical dances and costumes of India by Ambrose, Kay
Cultures and Costumes of India and Sri Lanka by Kilgallon, Conor (o course i had to see other books on costumes)
Studies In Indian Painting by DB Taraporevala
Five Thousand Years of Indian Art by Hermann Goetz
Indian Painiting by Philip Rawson
The Art of Tantra by Philip Rawson
MS Randhawa (different books on Punjabi paintings Basohli, Kangra, Guler and General Themes in Indian Painting)
The imperial image: paintings for the Mughal court by Beach, Milo Cleveland
Wonders of nature : Ustad Mansur at the Mughal court by Dāśa, Aśoka Kumāra
Imperial mughal painting by Welch, Stuart Cary
Painted delight : Indian paintings from Philadelphia collections
India : life, myth and art by Ram-Prasad, Chakravarthi
The heritage of Indian art by Agrawala, Vasudeva Sharana
The adventures of Rama : with illustrations from a sixteenth-century Mughal manuscript
Indian paintings from the Punjab Hills by WG Archer
Art in East and West by Rowland Benjamin
Stella Kramisch (An American art historian and curator who was a leading specialist on Indian art, including folk art, for most of the 20th century. Also a Padma Bhushan awardee.)
The transformation of nature in art by Coomaraswamy, Ananda K
Books available on Libgen:
Art Of Ancient India : Buddhist, Hindu, Jain by Huntington and Huntington
The New Cambridge History of India, Volume 1, Part 3: Mughal and Rajput Painting
Myths and Symbols in Indian Art and Civilization by Heinrich Zimmer
Four Centuries of Rajput Painting: Mewar, Marwar and Dhundhar Indian Miniatures from the Collection of Isabelle and Vicky Ducrot
Ajanta by Yazdani
The Aesthetic Experience Acording to Abhinavagupta
TheHeritageLab is a free website to connect you to cultural heritage through stories, public engagement programs, campaigns, and free-access content.
Also if you're in Delhi, do consider getting a membership of Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts (IGNCA) library.
Folk art:
Folk art is an entirely different area that deserve a post of its own. But i love them so here is a long list by Memeraki.com. You can Google each and then look more into what you like. This website also offers very cheap courses in traditional Indian arts by the hidden and disenfranchised masters themselves! It's doing a great work in giving them a platorm. I myself have taken the Mughal Miniature course here. You can consider it.
Illustrated Books:
Note: These are coffee table books with beautiful illustrations that you'd love to looks at.
The Night Life of Trees: In the belief of the Gond tribe, the lives of humans and trees are closely entwined. A visual ode to trees rendered by tribal artists from India, this handcrafted edition showcases three of the finest living Gond masters. THIS YOUTUBE LINK shows the making of the book. The channel also features other works of Gond art.
An Unknown Treasure in Rajasthan: The Bundi Wall-Paintings: This book celebrates the surviving wall-paintings at Bundi by presenting a stunning photographic survey
Painting In the Kangra Valley: Painting in the Kangra Valley is an attempt to survey the painting styles of Guler and Kangra, which flourished in the 18th and 19th centuries. The painting activity began with Kashmiri painters (...)
Indian Painting: The Lesser Known Traditions: India has an astonishingly rich variety of painting traditions. While miniature painting schools became virtually extinct with the decline of aristocratic patronage, a number of local vernacular idioms still survive and continue to develop.
Madhubani Art: Indian Art Series: Madhubani art's origin is believed to go back to the ancient era of the Ramayana, when the town was decorated by inhabitants of the region for the wedding of Lord Rama and Sita with elaborate wall paintings and murals (...) Primarily a significant socio-cultural engagement for the womenfolk of Bihar, this art was a welcome break from their daily drudgery.
Reflections on Mughal Art and Culture: Enter the splendid world of Mughal India and explore its rich aesthetic and cultural legacy through fresh insights offered by 13 eminent scholars.
Monsoon Feelings: A History of Emotions in the Rain: Through a series of evocative essays exploring rain-drenched worlds of poetry, songs, paintings, architecture, films, gardens, festivals, music and medicine, this lavishly illustrated collection examines the history of monsoon feelings in South Asia from the twelfth century to the present
Sita's Ramayana shifts the point of view of the Ramayana - the saga of a heroic war - to bring a woman's perspective to this timeless epic. Illustrated with Patua painting.
Adi Parva: Churning of the Ocean: a graphic novel that is a revisionist retelling of some of our oldest tales which have inspired and guided generations of people.
Ajit Mookerji, Sivaramamurti and Craven Roy's books are concise from where one can begin and then delve deeper into the subject of interest. Reading history and myths behind the work for context and listening to music from the given time/region alongside will make the exploration even more enjoyable!
Dude maybe stop projecting
this hinduphobia gang is so stupid its unreal because what the actual fuck do you mean that 'caste violence is an accepted fact' WHY THE FUCK WOULD YOU ACCEPT SOMETHING SO INHUMAN.
atrocities are happening in YOUR NAME. people of your religion are commintting it, and you think its enough for you to just accept it?
this is fucking privilege. you think you get to stay passive while people are killed, raped, displaced, and tortured because of a centuries-old system that was designed to maintain your comfort and power?
if you really cared about people slandering your religion, maybe start with the people within it who are using it as a tool to dehumanise. maybe fix that first. maybe stop crying “hinduphobia” every time someone points out the rot.
Justice to those who were wronged
what has war ever brought?
south asian diaspora students protest in solidarity of freedom for palestine, chanting for azadi (adopted from kashmiri slogans against occupation)
transcript under the cut
arre hum kya chahte? AZADI ! palestine ki AZADI ! cheen ke lenge AZADI ! hain haq humara AZADI ! cheekh ke bolo AZADI ! chillake bolo AZADI ! jor se bolo AZADI !
columbia main AZADI ! cornell main bhi AZADI ! palestine main bhi AZADI ! palestine maange AZADI !
aadhi raat main AZADI ! aadhi raat ko AZADI ! arre hum kya bole AZADI! baaki sunn le AZADI! columbia bole AZADI ! cornell bole AZADI !
cheen ke lenge AZADI! biden sunn le AZADI ! netanyahu sunn le AZADI ! modi sunn le AZADI ! columbia wale AZADI ! cornell bole AZADI ! nyu bole AZADI ! nypd se AZADI !
cheen ke lenge AZADI ! hain haq humara AZADI ! what do we want AZADI ! what do we want now AZADI !
Like I said they'd use "misinformation manufactured narratives and manipulation". And just look at how dedicated they are to this.
I'm glad some of us are doing the right thing by fighting this with truth. Because in the end truth triumphs.
I loved the daffodils that were offering to Mata. Loved the little art on the gold plates.
These are the real monsters. We don't need stories to scare kids anymore, give them nightmares. Because living side by side these monsters is enough of a nightmare.
While India bombed terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan and damaged their airbases these Pakistani men are discussing on X (twitter) spaces how they will accept Indian women after they convert to Islam. These low lives can only think about sęx sląvery.
I saw a post by one of my mutuals talking about dhoti. But I can't find it now. I just wanted to reblog it to say that I've heard many relatives and even my mother call a saree dhoti while talking in awadhi.
Which reminds me of this one very wholesome moment with my (now late) grandmother.
I was 5years old. And like every other summer vacation, we were visiting our grandparents in uttar pradesh. My parents had bought a really simple beautiful saree for my dadi. And the second day of us being there, my parents and I were sitting with my dadi and my parents told her that I had chosen and bought a saree for her (which was a lie but idk why my parents do that to involve me like all the time to show that I do think about all this). And my dadi got so happy saying "अरे हमार भैया हमरे खातिर धोती लाये अहेन? कहाँ बा?" So my mother sent me to go get it, because "i had picked it". But I replied to my mother "but hum toh dhoti laaye hi nahi hai. hum toh saree leke aaye hai dadi ke liye. dadi ko dhoti kyu chahiye? dadi dhoti pehente ha?". My mother replied didn't explain this to me. She just laughed and went with me to bring the saree and we gave it to daadi.
Does that lie help you sleep better?
India violated the ceasefire as expected
I'm just so sad
Sri Rama Setu
I am so fucking tired of these kind of posts getting hundreds of notes meanwhile the actual informative and factual posts barely reach even a hundred.
Look at the wording. "Militants" no, they were fucking terrorists. There is no other word for them. These people target civilians: they are terrorists.
And the article that person linked?
The mother herself said that person joined terrorists. Or well militants if that makes you feel better. They are not suspects; they are being identified and investigated on the basis of electronic messages and data that was found. These locals helped Pakistanis. We have moved beyond it being just a simple suspect case.
So sorry for wanting better safety, accountability, and justice 😔. I forgot we were just supposed to sit quietly, talk about muslim hindu solidarity, and wait for these terrorists to kill all of us one by one.
Also look at that person's tags lmaoo. "All eyes on kashmir". But if we used that tag they would be up in arms about "these hindutvas will gleefully celebrate Palestinian deaths then have the audacity to use it for sympathy points!! Shame on them!! Hindutvas are the scum!!" Like have some self awareness ffs
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌𖤓ᗩᗯᗩᗪᕼ KE ᗰᗩᗩTI 𖤓﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌ अवध के माटी - the soil of Awadh. Come celebrate the Awadhi culture through it's art and language
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