All India Travel Tourism Guide gives complete details about Art & craft in India
including various type of painting in India which shows the tradition
and culture of India. |
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Wood WorkCategory :- All India Travel Tourism > Arts > Crafts > Wood Work The tree was probably man's earliest friend, and he held it with awe and admiration from the very beginning. Man discovered the wondrous qualities of the wood and shaped it with his own fingers to wooden houses, structures and furniture. India boasts a luxuriant range in wood and the wood worker has evolved styles and items that particular types of wood lend themselves to, providing considerable range in wood-work. The Indian epic Ramayana refers to Hanuman
bringing down the Chaitya-Prasada shrine at Lanka. Literary sources
testifies that Chaitya-Prasada and its post were made of wood Kashmir has the soft toned elegant walnut and the facile deodar wood. The Kashmiri wooden architecture flourished from the 11th century AD. The lattice work called acche-dar and azli pinjra and the Khatamband are famous. The Gujarat architecture is lyrical and elaborate with its projected balconies, decorative windows and doors.
The artisans in Uttar Pradesh are famous for their Moghul designs such as fret work, jali and anguri. The wood carving of the north-eastern tribes are executed in a wood locally known as kumisyng. Among the carved objects, the huge log drum is particulary noteworthy. A partitioned stand with three legs, rice pounding tables, wooden cups and platters, smoking pipes and musical instruments are typical Naga woodwork. The wood carvings of the tribal areas of Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Orissa and Rajasthan include doors, window frames, "marriage-litters", wedding pillars, anthropomorphic sculptures, tobacco cases and pipes. Wood lacquerwork is popular in Karnataka and Maharashtra. The classical style of woodwork like painted cradles, boxes and ganjifa, the traditional set of playing cards are painted with religious and mythological figures. Wood inlay, which developed and flourished through Mughal influence involves the placing of small parts of ivory, plastic, horn, metal pieces or other types of wood into carved surfaces of wooden items. This is found in various parts of the country such as Gujarat, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Delhi.
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