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"This volume compiles in a succinct and visually compelling way a lasting record of the remarkable collection of Punjabi artworks and historical memorabilia representing the cultural history of the Punjab, assembled by Dr. Parvinderjit Singh Khanuja and his family. Dr. Khanuja has added here his personal perspectives on the historical importance and the meaningfulness of these objects, through essays accompanying the images and captions compiled in each of the chapters. The range of the collection is vast, reflecting the depth and variety of Punjabi artistic achievements -- Khanuja, express the concept of "Panjabiyat" which he explores in another essay expressing his personal sense of this very indigenous concept about the characteristics of Punjabi people. In every thematic group, the wide-ranging and well-selected collection cataloged here is thus accompanied by an essay expressing the collector's perspective. The resulting catalog or sourcebook of Punjabi history and art that we present here, drawn from the Khanuja Family Collection, is a unique and significant compilation that will be useful to scholars in many fields. It is beautifully illustrated, systematic, and replete with detailed information about each of the objects -- collectively forming a catalog of value to many fields, presenting well-described objects arranged not in chronological order, but rather in the form of pictorial essays on selected highly iconic themes in the tangible and intangible cultural history of the Punjab. Four of the chapters are on highly prized artistic media or types of material (textiles, coins, weapons and related elements of the Sikh martial tradition, illustrations and photography), while one chapter compiles images of Sikh Gurdwaras (temples). Others compile a range of artistic expressions from the Khanuja Family Collection about key aspects of (or personages in) the history and philosophy of Sikhism and the Sikh polity in the Punjab through time (the Gurus, Banda Singh Bahadur and the Misl Period; Maharaja Ranjit Singh and the later Sikh Empire; and the Princely States of the Punjab). A concluding chapter brings together examples from this collection that, according to the collector Dr. yet not at all like a typical museum catalog of a public or private collection. It is "systematic" in its careful illustration and identification of the objects, primarily giving voice to the honest and inspiring views of the collector, allowing readers to join the Khanuja family in their enthusiastic retracing of Punjabi cultural history and the Sikh ethos through the tour they provide of objects in their collection."--
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Hindu art --- Sikh art. --- Sikh literature.
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Sikh art --- -Sikh art --- -Art, Sikh --- Art --- Art [Sikh ] --- India --- Punjab --- Exhibitions --- Sikhs --- History --- Art, Sikh
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In this new, ground-breaking work, Woven Masterpieces of Sikh Heritage, Frank Ames' unique passion for the subject reveals the events and ideas that transpired within this Khalsa (Sikh Brotherhood) movement, transforming the Kashmir shawl to one of powerful ethnic proportions. During this era of Punjab's colourful history a variety of complex and enigmatic patterns emerged, some purely geometric, others symbolic, which have long eluded textiles experts. Maharaja Runjit Singh's takeover of Kashmir in 1819 had an extraordinary impact on the fashion of the legendary Kashmir shawl, giving rise to "a major artistic expression in the subcontinent". Through the exploration of miniature painting of Northern India and the hill states, Kashmiri manuscripts, the Sikh Holy Scriptures of the Sri Adi Granth and Janam Sakhis, and illustrations of unique shawls from world collections, Ames describes with his usual penchant for exacting detail the nature and source of these enigmatic patterns that define the Sikh period. In addition, textile enthusiasts will discover new material in chapters devoted to the Mughal period, lacquer painting and Indo-Persian shawl influences and trade.
Cashmere shawls --- Sikh art --- History --- Ranjit Singh, --- Art patronage.
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This volume brings together leading scholars of Sikhism and of Sikh art to assess and interpret the remarkable art resource known as the Kapany Collection, using it to introduce to a broad public the culture, history, and ethos of the Sikhs. Fifteen renowned scholars contributed essays describing the passion and vision of Narinder and Satinder Kapany in assembling this unparalleled assemblage of great Sikh art, some of which has been displayed in exhibitions around the globe. The Kapanys' legacy of philanthropic work includes establishing the Sikh Foundation (now celebrating its 50th year) and university endowments for Sikh studies. Through this profusely illustrated book's chapters, scholars examine the full range of Sikh artistic expression and of Sikh history and cultural life, using artworks from the Kapany Collection.
Sikh art --- Sikhism in art --- Private collections --- Kapany, N. S. --- Kapany, Satinder K. --- Art collections. --- Kapany Collection.
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S34/1100 --- J6491.31 --- J6491.32 --- Indian subcontinent--Art and archaeology --- Asia: Art and antiquities in the Indian subcontinent -- India --- Asia: Art and antiquities in the Indian subcontinent -- Pakistan --- Exhibitions --- Sikhs --- Sikhism --- Sikh art --- Sikh music --- Sikh art. --- Sikh music. --- Sikhism. --- Sikhs. --- History --- Social life and customs --- Social life and customs. --- Punjab (India) --- Punjab (Pakistan) --- India --- Pakistan --- Sikhisme --- Art sikh --- Musique sikh --- Histoire --- Moeurs et coutumes --- Pendjab (Inde)
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