The British Museum has announced plans to hold a five month programme dedicated to Indian culture in 2009.
The programme, called Indian Summer, is sponsored by HSBC bank and will include a range of themed exhibitions, installations, performances, lectures and film screenings.
One of the exhibits, called Garden and Cosmos: The Royal Paintings of Jodhpur, will run from 28 May to 23 August and will focus on paintings created in the 18th and first half of the 19th century. It will also debut 55 works from the Mehrangarh Museum Trust in Jodhpur, Rajasthan, never before seen in Europe.
The British Museum will also be collaborating with the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew to create an Indian-themed landscape on the museum's west lawn.
There will also be a varied programme or events and activities, featuring public debates, lectures and talks by Indian academics and artists.
British Museum director, Neil MacGregor, said: “There is an enduring fascination with the rich diversity of the art and culture of India. Garden and Cosmos epitomises this diversity through the polarities expressed in the paintings, focusing on both the external courtly life of pleasure on the one hand and an internal life of devotion and speculation on the other. I am most grateful to HSBC for enabling us to present Indian Summer”
The season will begin in May and close in October 2009.
The British Museum has announced plans to hold a five month programme dedicated to Indian culture in 2009.
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The British Museum has announced plans to hold a five month programme dedicated to Indian culture in 2009.
The programme, called Indian Summer, is sponsored by HSBC bank and will include a range of themed exhibitions, installations, performances, lectures and film screenings.
One of the exhibits, called Garden and Cosmos: The Royal Paintings of Jodhpur, will run from 28 May to 23 August and will focus on paintings created in the 18th and first half of the 19th century. It will also debut 55 works from the Mehrangarh Museum Trust in Jodhpur, Rajasthan, never before seen in Europe.
The British Museum will also be collaborating with the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew to create an Indian-themed landscape on the museum's west lawn.
There will also be a varied programme or events and activities, featuring public debates, lectures and talks by Indian academics and artists.
British Museum director, Neil MacGregor, said: “There is an enduring fascination with the rich diversity of the art and culture of India. Garden and Cosmos epitomises this diversity through the polarities expressed in the paintings, focusing on both the external courtly life of pleasure on the one hand and an internal life of devotion and speculation on the other. I am most grateful to HSBC for enabling us to present Indian Summer”
The season will begin in May and close in October 2009.
The British Museum has announced plans to hold a five month programme dedicated to Indian culture in 2009.
If the health service is to
survive, we must recognise
that it is a disease service
– and that wellbeing rests with
us, says the activity advocate
and healthy ageing champion.
He talks to Kate Cracknell
Collaborations with the medical profession and greater aspirations around wellbeing are creating a need for more experts in our sector. It’s time to reboot our thinking around the workforce
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CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an
on-demand personal training platform that connects the right personal trainer to the right
client in under 10 seconds.
Active Blackpool is deploying Cornerstone Connect, a new digital interface allowing
disparate information from multiple systems to be aggregated into one dataset, to support
its focus on reducing health inequalities and improving healthy life expectancy.
STA is pleased to announce that its Safeguarding Children and Adults at Risk CPD has been
endorsed by the Chartered Institute for the Management of Sport and Physical Activity
(CIMSPA) against both the Safeguarding and Protecting Children and Safeguarding Adults
technical specialism professional standards.