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The Buddhist art of Gandhāra : the story of the early school, its birth, growth, and decline /

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cambridge [Eng.] :; Published for the Dept. of Archaeology in Pakistan at the University Press,; 1960Description: xvii, 117 p., 111 p. of platesSubject(s): DDC classification:
  • 704.948 MAR 23 14318
Summary: "About two thousand years ago, the land named Gandhara on the west banks of the Indus fell successively under the domination of the Greeks, the Sakas and the Parthians. This book gives an account of the school of art which formed itself under these widely divergent cultures. The early Gandhara school is chiefly notable in providing the earliest works of art in which the Buddha was represented in bodily form. Before this, he has always been shown symbolically; the characteristic and now familiar Buddha image was developed from the work of the early Gandhara sculptors." "Sir John Marshall begins by analysing the formative influences of Gandhara art, its relationship to the early school of Central India and Hindustan, and the extent of its debt to the Greeks. He then traces the history of its development, in a remarkable and carefully chosen series of illustrations. The text is in the form of a commentary on these illustrations; the reader can thus share the author's extensive knowledge of the Gandhara school while observing for himself its growth and decline." "Since it deals with the birth of their religious art as it exists today, this book must be of interest to a great many people in Buddhist countries. It will also be of great value to oriental historians and those concerned with Eastern art in general." --BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved
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"About two thousand years ago, the land named Gandhara on the west banks of the Indus fell successively under the domination of the Greeks, the Sakas and the Parthians. This book gives an account of the school of art which formed itself under these widely divergent cultures. The early Gandhara school is chiefly notable in providing the earliest works of art in which the Buddha was represented in bodily form. Before this, he has always been shown symbolically; the characteristic and now familiar Buddha image was developed from the work of the early Gandhara sculptors." "Sir John Marshall begins by analysing the formative influences of Gandhara art, its relationship to the early school of Central India and Hindustan, and the extent of its debt to the Greeks. He then traces the history of its development, in a remarkable and carefully chosen series of illustrations. The text is in the form of a commentary on these illustrations; the reader can thus share the author's extensive knowledge of the Gandhara school while observing for himself its growth and decline." "Since it deals with the birth of their religious art as it exists today, this book must be of interest to a great many people in Buddhist countries. It will also be of great value to oriental historians and those concerned with Eastern art in general." --BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

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