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From PhalkeFactory
  • ...rought up in a traditional orthodox Hindu household, got interested in the Arts and Photography, threw away his family profession of priesthood, sold his w ...e tracing and representing the assimilation and developments in industrial arts and crafts that led to the film entertainment industry by tracing and drawi
    4 KB (631 words) - 21:47, 24 September 2017
  • ...rought up in a traditional orthodox Hindu household, got interested in the Arts and Photography, threw away his family profession of priesthood, sold his w ...chanical gadgets caught the fancy of the people involved in the performing arts, and the stage and entertainment business. The first decade of the century
    28 KB (4,665 words) - 03:19, 6 May 2006
  • ...ht up in a traditional orthodox [[Hindu household]], got interested in the Arts and [[Photography]], threw away his family profession of priesthood, sold h ...chanical gadgets caught the fancy of the people involved in the performing arts, and the stage and entertainment business. The first decade of the century
    29 KB (4,743 words) - 09:52, 25 December 2011
  • ...e tracing and representing the assimilation and developments in industrial arts and crafts that led to the film entertainment industry by tracing and drawi ...a [[Sanskrit]] scholar and [[astronomer]], he moved to [[Sir J.J.School of arts]] where he learnt [[tracing]], [[drawing]] and [[moulding]].
    36 KB (5,567 words) - 11:20, 30 March 2009
  • ...amilies" would not even dream of having anything to do with the performing arts, least of all the cinema. ...o the world at large. Had he not hired Master Ghulam Haider to do the very traditional, staid and Punjabi music for it, the songs may never have hit the headlines
    14 KB (2,270 words) - 08:01, 3 May 2006
  • ...were from hereditary artisan communities, and their training was rooted in traditional apprenticeship. These so-called craftsmen devised a new style of painting, The Kalighat style, well represented by the paintings in the Gallery Arts India exhibition, is characterized by economy of line in deftly executed br
    13 KB (2,044 words) - 01:22, 27 April 2006
  • ...ewly-created center for the study of ceramics, silver and other decorative arts, whose goal was the improvement of British products through the study of we ...tic tale allowed Jones to use motifs from Egypt and Persia as well as more traditional Western ones.
    22 KB (3,069 words) - 15:45, 17 July 2006
  • ...ers to write them out.”11 And in another lecture at the Royal Society of Arts three months later, he expanded on this, as well as giving a plug for his n ...istant. See Robert Herbert, Jean François-Millet (London: Hayward Gallery/Arts Council of Great Britain, 1976), 87–89.
    695 KB (110,553 words) - 04:32, 27 April 2006
  • ...t each other in a simulated environment. In another example, in 1992 Lucas Arts has teamed up with Hughes Aircraft, combining the expertise in computer gam ...Experimental Psychology seems best to fill these requirements, because the traditional data and subject of experimental psychology are fundamental to this field."
    803 KB (128,263 words) - 16:43, 24 May 2006
  • O my fellow beings! O learned men! O appreciative men who know all the arts! O pioneers of this new era of reforms! Your ...eal twilight outside VT station that a group of boys from the JJ School of Arts sits with hammers and knives, carving out figures on the terraces and the t
    196 KB (33,860 words) - 23:45, 10 May 2006
  • twentieth century suggests parallel studies of other arts, visual objects are liquidated of their traditional
    110 KB (17,694 words) - 16:11, 21 May 2006
  • ...amilies" would not even dream of having anything to do with the performing arts, least of all the cinema. ...o the world at large. Had he not hired Master Ghulam Haider to do the very traditional, staid and Punjabi music for it, the songs may never have hit the headlines
    13 KB (2,177 words) - 16:32, 22 May 2006
  • ...tory features King Munja, ruler of Aranti, famed warrior and patron of the arts. Munja (Sandow) falls into the hands of his arch enemy Tailap, who received ...t criticizes the British education policies and counterposed a defence of 'traditional' Indian teaching systems
    127 KB (20,817 words) - 08:24, 8 July 2006
  • ...ry luminaries. Kalidasa was well acquainted with contemporary sciences and arts, including politics and astronomy. His knowledge of scientific astronomy wa
    22 KB (3,635 words) - 16:02, 22 May 2006
  • ...music, howled in anger at this sudden hybridisation and plagiarisation of traditional Indian tunes. Today this very 'hybridisation' defines the unique persona of ...peech, culture is often interpreted as refinement or sophistication in the arts. Sociologists and anthropologists commonly define culture as the social pro
    61 KB (10,242 words) - 16:34, 22 May 2006
  • ...ers to write them out.”11 And in another lecture at the Royal Society of Arts three months later, he expanded on this, as well as giving a plug for his n ...istant. See Robert Herbert, Jean François-Millet (London: Hayward Gallery/Arts Council of Great Britain, 1976), 87–89.
    855 KB (137,726 words) - 17:02, 22 May 2006
  • ...which was about the triumph of European Science, but also became about the traditional decoration practiced by non industrial societies of the east (Partho mitter ...e arts among the urban elite. These included the kantha and other domestic arts produced byu women. Parto Mitter,Indian Art.
    1 KB (225 words) - 16:34, 5 January 2015
  • ...their dominance would be a curse; but if they promoted enlightenment with arts and sciences to improve conditions, then the gratitude of India and the adm ...incorporated in Calcutta, Bombay, and Madras. Their faculties were in the arts, law, medicine, engineering, and science. Lahore University was established
    133 KB (21,627 words) - 19:09, 24 May 2006
  • ...Indian society; we see elite artists as enterprising individuals replacing traditional artisans, ...which Europe had already passed through: the emancipation of artists from traditional aristocratic patronage who were now sustained by public opinion in the form
    41 KB (6,545 words) - 14:40, 8 May 2009
  • ...We must expect great innovations to transform the entire technique of the arts, thereby affecting artistic invention itself and perhaps even bringing abou ...production of works of art and the art of the film--have had on art in its traditional form.
    129 KB (20,642 words) - 22:48, 8 July 2006

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