Making Faces: Self and Image Creation in a Himalayan Valley
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
- 9780824835255
- ARTS HIN
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Arthshila Ahmedabad Cluster: 3M | ARTS/HIN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | BK00652 |
Taberam Soni, Labh Singh, Amar Singh, and other artists live and work in the hill-villages of the lower Himalayas in Himachal Pradesh, India. There they fashion face-images of deities (mohras) out of thin sheets of precious metal. Commissioned by upper-caste patrons, the objects are cultural embodiments of divine and earthly kinship. As the artists make the images, they also cross caste boundaries in a part of India where such differences still determine rules of contact and correspondence, proximity and association. Once a mohra has been completed and consecrated, its maker is not permitted to touch it or enter the temple in which it is housed; yet during its creation the artist is sovereign, treated deferentially as he shares living quarters with the high-caste patrons. Making Faces is an original and evocative account, superbly illustrated, of the various phases in the lifecycle of a mohra, at different times a religious icon, an art object, and a repository of material wealth in an otherwise subsistence economy. It will be welcomed by scholars and students of anthropology, material culture, religion, art history, and South Asian studies.