ABSTRACT

Chakshudana or rituals of opening the eyes are practiced across multiple South Asian communities by artists, sculptors, and priests. The ritual offers gods access to the mortal world. This practice, applied to the study of material and visual culture, offers a distinctive perspective to interrogate the complex engagements with paintings, sculptures, found objects, fragments, built environments, and ecologies.

This volume takes the process of seeing as its focus—to look closely, remaining true to the object, but also to see widely—from multiple subjective stances and diverse bodily engagements such as walking to dreaming, glancing to looking askance, hypnotic stares, and to see beyond the visible. It examines art history through nuanced considerations of materiality, aesthetics, and regional specificities. The essays emerge from current research that builds on the contributions of Michael W. Meister, W. Norman Brown Distinguished Professor of History of Art and South Asia Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, whose works laid the foundations for the study of South Asian visual and material culture. The essays in this book underscore methodological resonances rather than privileging conventional categories of media or chronology, exploring artistic media including temples and paintings as well as Bengali-quilted textiles, manuscript ‘lozenges,’ and metal repousse.

This volume, part of the Visual Media and Histories Series, will be of interest to students and researchers of history of art, religious studies, and history as well as the allied disciplines of anthropology and folklore studies.

Chapter 2 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

chapter 1|17 pages

Introduction

Reading Monuments and Seeing Texts: Michael W. Meister and the Opening of Eyes 1

part I|40 pages

Seeing and Knowing

chapter 2|21 pages

Region, Style, Idiom, and Ritual in History

Michael W. Meister on the Study of Jain Art

chapter 4|9 pages

Churning the Object

Michael W. Meister as Manthāna

chapter 5|2 pages

Reminiscence

part II|32 pages

Style and Idiom

chapter 6|13 pages

Meister Purana in Modern Indian Art

chapter 7|17 pages

Squaring a Circle

Design and Construction in the Temple of Anwa

part III|20 pages

Formal Metamorphoses and Mutability of Meaning

chapter 8|18 pages

Liberating Migrations

On the Trail of Jaina Temples in Medieval Central India

chapter 9|22 pages

Paper Prāsādas

part IV|51 pages

Vernacular Craft and the Rhetoric of Re-Making

chapter 10|25 pages

On Jaidev Baghel's Practice

Casting Aside the Art / Craft Divide 1

chapter 11|24 pages

Chamba and the ‘Painterly' Vision

part V|46 pages

Image Iconopraxis and Iconoplasty

chapter 13|25 pages

Stitching Spectacles

A Visual Culture of Bodily Prowess and Muscular Nationalism in Colonial Bengal 1