Divine Color: Hindu Prints from Modern Bengal
By MFA PublicationsDescription
Under the rule of the British Raj, Bengali artists embraced European techniques to devise a uniquely local visual language that appealed to a diverse audience. 'Divine Color' magnifies this phenomenon through mapping popular devotional art through lithographic printing in then 19th- and early 20th-century Calcutta. These vibrant mass-produced images brought the divine into the everyday, offering devotees new ways to engage with their gods, and reshaping spiritual experiences in colonial India.
Set against the backdrop of a rapidly modernising and cosmopolitan city, these prints emerged at the crossroads of vernacular tradition and colonial exchange. Their spirited aesthetic, devotional power and often political symbolism made them powerful tools of cultural expression and identity. The visual language pioneered by Calcutta lithographers played a foundational role in the formation of modern India’s visual culture; their influence is visible in everything from advertising and political posters to decorative arts, underscoring the ritual, commercial and political power of these artworks. 'Divine Color' restores these religious lithographs to their rightful place in the history of Indian art and invites readers to experience not just the divine world of Hindu gods, but the shaping of a modern visual India.
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