Kaimal, 2011 - Google Patents
Shiva Nataraja: Multiple Meanings of an IconKaimal, 2011
- Document ID
- 1883913353624776722
- Author
- Kaimal P
- Publication year
- Publication venue
- A Companion to Asian Art and Architecture
External Links
Snippet
The image type now commonly referred to as Shiva Nataraja (“King of the Dance”) may be the most famous form in India's visual arts (fig. 19-1). 1 In survey texts of world art, in India's handicraft shops, even on travel brochures and concert programs, images of this Hindu god …
- 230000000007 visual effect 0 abstract description 9
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
Dean | Taoist ritual and popular cults of Southeast China | |
Hemmings | Culture and society in France 1789-1848 | |
Wiles | A short history of Western performance space | |
Stewart | Sacred woman, sacred dance: Awakening spirituality through movement and ritual | |
Dempsey | “Et nos cedamus amori”: Observations on the Farnese Gallery | |
Kaimal | Shiva Nataraja: Shifting meanings of an icon | |
Mukhopadhyay | Folk arts and social communication | |
Parker | The bells! The bells! Approaching tintinnabula in Roman Britain and beyond | |
Goldberg | Artifice and authenticity: Gender scenarios in Pina Bausch's dance theatre | |
Frank | Unfinished Christians: Ritual objects and silent subjects in late antiquity | |
Brown | Seeking conflict in Mesoamerica: operational, cognitive, and experiential approaches | |
Kaimal | Shiva Nataraja: Multiple Meanings of an Icon | |
RICH | Maya sacred play. The view from El Perú-Waka | |
Sharrock | The mystery of the face towers | |
Gleason | Oya in the Company of Saints | |
Norris | Greek Art: From Prehistoric to Classical: a resource for educators | |
Stein | Dressed to Heal, Protect and Rule: Vestiges of Shamanic Praxis in Ancient Near Eastern Rituals and Beliefs | |
Toffin | A Vaishnava Theatrical Performance in Nepal: The" Kāttī-pyākhã" of Lalitpur City | |
Goldberg | The White House: The President's Home in Photographs and History | |
Franko | Where He Danced: Cocteau's Barbette and Ohno's Water Lilies | |
Sarma | Venerating Vēṭṭaykkorumakan (Son of Śiva and Pārvatī) through Ritual Arts | |
Nii-Yartey | Dance symbolism in Africa | |
Drake | Shamanic Journeys: An Anthology | |
Chan | The magic of Chinese theatre: theatre as a ritual of sacral transmogrification | |
Richter | Encounters from Dada till Today |