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REVIEW
'Indian
Summer' Season 2 May - 28 September 2009
British Museum
Great Russell Street
London WC1B 3DG
Tel: +44 (0)20 7323 8181
Fax: +44 (0)20 7323 8616
Opening Hours; 10am - 5.30pm daily
Email: tickets@britishmuseum.org www.britishmuseum.org
The British Museum has announced plans for Indian Summer, a season
dedicated to Indian culture featuring a unique programme of exhibitions,
installations, performances, lectures and film screenings that will
run from 2 May until 28 Spetember 2009 in London.. The season includes:
Garden and Cosmos: The Royal Paintings of Jodhpur, an exhibition
which provides a rare opportunity to view paintings of outstanding
interest and variety that have never previously been seen in Europe:
an India Landscape, a specially commissioned space presenting Indian
biodiversity in the Museum's forecourt in collaboration with Kew
Gardens: and a rich and varied public programme.
Launching the season
British Museum Director, Neil MacGregor commented: "There is
an enduring fascination with the rich diversity of the art and culture
of India. Garden and Cosmos epitomises this diversity through the
polarities expressed in the paintings, focusing on both the external
courtly life of pleasure on the one hand and an internal life of
devotion and speculation on the other."
Garden and Cosmos:
The Royal Paintings of Jodhpur:
28 May - 23 August 2009 Room 35, £8 - members free
Garden and Cosmos
will focus on the distinctive style of court painting which flourished
in Jodhpur, in Rajasthan, during the 18th and first half of the
19th centuries. The exhibition will feature a loan of fifty-five
works from the Mehrangarh Museum Trust in Jodhpur which has been
set up by the present Maharaja, H.H. Gaj Singh II. These paintings
have never been seen in Europe before and are of exceptional quality.
The two elements of
the title, 'Garden' and 'Cosmos' represent two distinct styles and
functions over the period represented in the exhibition. 'Garden'
presents paintings of palace life, many of them centred on the pleasures
of the royal court and including vibrant illustrations of the great
Indian epics, especially of the Ramayana.
In
'Cosmos', we see paintings from the long reign of Man Singh (r.1803-43)
which are remarkable as, in their subject matter, they turn away
from the glowing exterior world of court life and instead address
the interior world of philosophical speculation and the origin of
the universe. The precise meaning of some of these paintings is
unclear but the large fields of unmediated and pulsating colour
show that the Jodhpur artists reached the same aesthetic and spiritual
zone as Mark Rothko, but a century earlier. Alongside this major
loan from Jodhpur are two important paintings loaned from the National
Museum in Delhi and two paintings from the British Museum's own
collection.
Garden and Cosmos:
The Royal Paintings of Jodhpur is organised by the Arthur M. Sackler
Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, in collaboration with the Mehrangargh
Museum Trust.
India Landscape:
2 May - 28 September 2009 British Museum Forecourt, admission free
To complement the
exhibition, the British Museum, in collaboration with the Royal
Botanic Gardens, Kew will create an Indian-themed landscape on the
Museum's west lawn. The landscape will showcase the impressive biodiversity
of the Indian subcontinent, taking visitors on a journey from the
mountainous environment of the Himalayas, through a temperate region
and ending in a sub-tropical zone centred on a tank filled with
lotus blossoms. The landscape will highlight plant use in India
- as food, medicine and in trade and the way plants such as chilli
(native to South America) have travelled and become completely indigenised.
Finally, the dramatic consequences of habitat destruction in the
subcontinent will also be addressed. The landscape is the second
in a series of five planned collaborations with Kew.