Exhibitions are often equated with the nation, used to design and promote national identity. After Indian independence, during the Cold War, exhibitions co-designed by US and Indian practitioners were used to bring together two different countries for mutual (but discrete) national benefit. This article interrogates these ‘national’ exhibitions, attending to their transnational nature and positioning their creators as ‘cosmopolitan patriots’ whose plural identities were forged in the making of exhibitions and the material world. Focusing on the complex professional and personal relationships between Indian and US curators and designers, this article examines three major exhibitions of India held in the US: ‘Jawaharlal Nehru: His Life and Hi...
This article explores the relationship between “permanent” exhibitions and political flux. Offering ...
In order to fully understand and appreciate India's contested national identity, one must look at th...
Though considerably more liberal than 20 years ago, museological practices common in ethnographic mu...
Exhibitions are often equated with the nation, used to design and promote national identity. After I...
As the British Empire crumbled, a newly independent India forged fresh political and economic relati...
This book chapter has developed from a panel co-convened by Nicola Ashmore and Megha Rajguru ‘Exhibi...
The 1851 Crystal Palace exhibition in London brought together arts and crafts from around the world ...
Following the first world exhibition, the 1851 Crystal Palace Exhibition in London, exhibitions beca...
Beginning in the early 20th century, art museums in America were among the first to collect and disp...
In India in London I explore the numerous ways that Indian identity was being corporeally represente...
In his article Aesthetics, Nationalism, and the Image of Woman in Modern Indian Art Kedar Vishwana...
This thesis takes an original approach to twentieth century south Asian history by linking long esta...
The present review of 20th Century Indian Art focuses on the book’s contribution to debates around ‘...
Colonial powers, indigenous traditions, and internal ethnic and religious rivalries all contribute t...
This article is a kind of reflection of a museum professional on the theme of the developing museum ...
This article explores the relationship between “permanent” exhibitions and political flux. Offering ...
In order to fully understand and appreciate India's contested national identity, one must look at th...
Though considerably more liberal than 20 years ago, museological practices common in ethnographic mu...
Exhibitions are often equated with the nation, used to design and promote national identity. After I...
As the British Empire crumbled, a newly independent India forged fresh political and economic relati...
This book chapter has developed from a panel co-convened by Nicola Ashmore and Megha Rajguru ‘Exhibi...
The 1851 Crystal Palace exhibition in London brought together arts and crafts from around the world ...
Following the first world exhibition, the 1851 Crystal Palace Exhibition in London, exhibitions beca...
Beginning in the early 20th century, art museums in America were among the first to collect and disp...
In India in London I explore the numerous ways that Indian identity was being corporeally represente...
In his article Aesthetics, Nationalism, and the Image of Woman in Modern Indian Art Kedar Vishwana...
This thesis takes an original approach to twentieth century south Asian history by linking long esta...
The present review of 20th Century Indian Art focuses on the book’s contribution to debates around ‘...
Colonial powers, indigenous traditions, and internal ethnic and religious rivalries all contribute t...
This article is a kind of reflection of a museum professional on the theme of the developing museum ...
This article explores the relationship between “permanent” exhibitions and political flux. Offering ...
In order to fully understand and appreciate India's contested national identity, one must look at th...
Though considerably more liberal than 20 years ago, museological practices common in ethnographic mu...