Nakshi Kantha of Bengal
by Basak , Sila.
Material type:![materialTypeLabel](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
Item type | Location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Central Library, RBU.
Reference
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746.44095414 B297 (Browse shelf) | Not For Loan | 97605 |
Includes bibliography and index
The art of Kantha or embroidered qiult has been flourishing in rural Bengal for centuries.Its exquisite beauty was brought to the notice of city dwellers, and to some extent, to the outside world.Dr.Sila Basak has now produced commendable work on the Kantha art of Bengal, the result of extensive research, painstaking field-work, introspective and collections of materials from far and near. She starts with a brief history of needlework in the word and its practice in India from an early date. She dwells upon the large social content of the Kantha that genuinely reflects the role of Bengali woman. A careful analysis further brings out the reflections of folk beliefs and practices, of religious ideas, of themes and characters from mythologies and epics, of flora and fauna, and finally of man and nature. The Kantha, in its own way, depict the social and personal life of the people.
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