BBC Hidden Treasures of indian Art part 3, 2011
PDTV-Rip AVI English 59mn XviD 750 GB
Documentary
Directed bJames Runcie
Starring Griff Rhys Jones
Hidden Treasures of ....
In this new, three-part series, Griff Rhys Jones - an avid art collector and enthusiast - ventures to remote corners of the globe to examine the artistic creativity of three disparate indigenous cultures to ask what we have lost, what is still being preserved, and to challenge preconceived notions surrounding the nature and value of tribal expression. "To be human is to create, and some of the most compelling art in the world has been made by some of its poorest people, and it fascinates me," comments Griff. "Can traditional art survive the modern world?" In each programme, Griff embarks on sometimes hazardous quests to remote communities that have produced extraordinary work, now seemingly part of a lost world, to discover what remains of ancient cultural art, the impulses that underpin it, and how it has been affected over time by political, social and religious incursions from the West. Each programme examines a different aspect of the whole subject. They are about belief, authenticity and identity.
In his quest to find out if traditional art still thrives among the indigenous people of the world, Griff Rhys Jones goes to India in search of exquisite textiles. Can he solve the mystery of an extraordinary Indian floor cloth kept in Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire for over 300 years? Who made it and does the skill that produced such a work still exist?
Griff travels to Gujarat in India, famed throughout history for its beautiful handmade textiles. He goes off the beaten tracks to the towns and villages of the north-west plains and discovers how centuries-old printing, dyeing and embroidery techniques are still the cornerstones to a way of life.
Finally, he travels to the heart of one of the most reclusive and fiercely traditional societies in India, the Rabari, who are famed for their toughness and their astonishing embroidery. Here, women spend years sewing dowry gifts - but can the custom survive in the 21st century?
http://www.fileserve.com/file/G8Yvzu4
http://www.fileserve.com/file/evNyt3T
http://www.fileserve.com/file/zACMKxH
http://www.filesonic.com/file/254961114/BBC.Hidden.Treasures.of.3of3.Indian.Art.part1.rar
http://www.filesonic.com/file/255096274/BBC.Hidden.Treasures.of.3of3.Indian.Art.part2.rar
http://www.filesonic.com/file/255258424/BBC.Hidden.Treasures.of.3of3.Indian.Art.part3.rar
PDTV-Rip AVI English 59mn XviD 750 GB
Documentary
Directed bJames Runcie
Starring Griff Rhys Jones
Hidden Treasures of ....
In this new, three-part series, Griff Rhys Jones - an avid art collector and enthusiast - ventures to remote corners of the globe to examine the artistic creativity of three disparate indigenous cultures to ask what we have lost, what is still being preserved, and to challenge preconceived notions surrounding the nature and value of tribal expression. "To be human is to create, and some of the most compelling art in the world has been made by some of its poorest people, and it fascinates me," comments Griff. "Can traditional art survive the modern world?" In each programme, Griff embarks on sometimes hazardous quests to remote communities that have produced extraordinary work, now seemingly part of a lost world, to discover what remains of ancient cultural art, the impulses that underpin it, and how it has been affected over time by political, social and religious incursions from the West. Each programme examines a different aspect of the whole subject. They are about belief, authenticity and identity.
In his quest to find out if traditional art still thrives among the indigenous people of the world, Griff Rhys Jones goes to India in search of exquisite textiles. Can he solve the mystery of an extraordinary Indian floor cloth kept in Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire for over 300 years? Who made it and does the skill that produced such a work still exist?
Griff travels to Gujarat in India, famed throughout history for its beautiful handmade textiles. He goes off the beaten tracks to the towns and villages of the north-west plains and discovers how centuries-old printing, dyeing and embroidery techniques are still the cornerstones to a way of life.
Finally, he travels to the heart of one of the most reclusive and fiercely traditional societies in India, the Rabari, who are famed for their toughness and their astonishing embroidery. Here, women spend years sewing dowry gifts - but can the custom survive in the 21st century?
http://www.fileserve.com/file/G8Yvzu4
http://www.fileserve.com/file/evNyt3T
http://www.fileserve.com/file/zACMKxH
http://www.filesonic.com/file/254961114/BBC.Hidden.Treasures.of.3of3.Indian.Art.part1.rar
http://www.filesonic.com/file/255096274/BBC.Hidden.Treasures.of.3of3.Indian.Art.part2.rar
http://www.filesonic.com/file/255258424/BBC.Hidden.Treasures.of.3of3.Indian.Art.part3.rar