![]() | Displaying Time: The Many Temporalities of the Festival of India From the fluttering fabric of a tent, to the blurred motion of the potter's wheel, to the rhythm of a horse puppet's wooden hooves--these scenes make up a set of mid-1980s art exhibitions as part of the U.S. Festival of India. The festival was conceived at a meeting between Indira Gandhi and Ronald Reagan to strengthen relations between the two countries at a time of late Cold War tensions and global economic change, when America's image of India was as a place of desperate poverty and spectacular fantasy. Displaying Time unpacks the intimate, small-scale durations of time at work in the gallery from the transformation of clay into ceramic to the one-on-one, personal encounters between museum visitors and artists. Rebecca M. Brown is associate professor of the history of art at Johns Hopkins University. She is the author of Gandhi's Spinning Wheel and the Making of India and Art for a Modern India, 1947-1980 , and coeditor of A Companion to Asian Art and Architecture . |
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