{"id":732,"date":"2018-01-19T13:02:33","date_gmt":"2018-01-19T07:32:33","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/theasifkamal.com\/blog\/?p=732"},"modified":"2018-01-19T13:02:51","modified_gmt":"2018-01-19T07:32:51","slug":"comparison-traditional-indian-art-contemporary-indian-art","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/theasifkamal.com\/blog\/2018\/01\/19\/comparison-traditional-indian-art-contemporary-indian-art\/","title":{"rendered":"Comparison between traditional Indian art and Contemporary Indian art"},"content":{"rendered":"
Taking a look over the terrain tracked by Indian art over the past century shows a diverse range of artistic responses to reality. While in the early years Indian painters seemed to concern themselves primarily with the societal, the coming of the modernists and then the contemporaries, a younger group of artists born after independence, variegated India’s artistic outlook dramatically in the following decades. Artists’ assertions became, at different times, nationalist or modernist, socially responsive or intensely subjective, fiercely indigenist or defiantly international, or self consciously traditionalist or fashionably postmodernism. These moments were not, of course, mutually exclusive and did not necessarily follow in the order listed, but mirrored to a great extent the diversity of the artistic impulses developed in India during the 20th and early 21st centuries.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n