Santiniketan makes it to UNESCO World Heritage list
- September 18, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
No Comments
Santiniketan makes it to UNESCO World Heritage list
Subject: History
Section: Arts and culture
Context:
- Santi Niketan, the town in West Bengal, was included in the UNESCO World Heritage list during the 45th Session of the World Heritage Committee in Saudi Arabia.
About Shanti Niketan:
- Established in 1901 by the Nobel Laureate Gurudev Rabindra Nath Tagore.
- Location: Birbhum district, West Bengal.
- Current Vice-chancellor of Santiniketan: Bidyut Chakrabarti
- It is the 41st UNESCO World Heritage Site in India and the third in West Bengal, after the Sundarbans National Park and the Darjeeling Mountain Railways.
- Last year (2022), the state’s Durga Puja got space in “Intangible Cultural Heritage of humanity” under UNESCO.
- Santiniketan was a residential school and center for art based on ancient Indian traditions and a vision of the unity of humanity transcending religious and cultural boundaries.
- A ‘world university’ – Visva Bharati – was established at Santiniketan in 1921.
- Santiniketan was the pioneer of the Bengal School of Art. It exhibits the crystallisation of their ideas of internationalism, humanism, inclusiveness, environmentalism and a pan Asian modernism.
- Global art movements parallel to Santiniketan:
Bauhaus:
- Founded by architect Walter Gropius in Weimar, the Staatliches Bauhaus, or Bauhaus (German for ‘building house’), was a German art school operational from 1919 to 1933 that combined crafts and the fine arts.
- The school became famous for its approach to design, which attempted to unify individual artistic vision with the principles of mass production and emphasis on function.
Mingei in Japan:
- The concept of mingei, variously translated into English as “folk craft”, “folk art” or “popular art”, was developed from the mid-1920s in Japan by a philosopher and aesthete, Yanagi Sōetsu (1889–1961), together with a group of craftsmen, including the potters Hamada Shōji (1894–1978) and Kawai Kanjirō (1890–1966).
- Mingei may be seen as a reaction to Japan’s rapid modernization processes.
Vienna session in Austria:
- The Vienna Secession is an art movement, closely related to Art Nouveau, that was formed in 1897 by a group of Austrian painters, graphic artists, sculptors and architects, including Josef Hoffman, Koloman Moser, Otto Wagner and Gustav Klimt.
Other sites to find place on the prestigious listinclude:
- Ancient Jericho in Palestine; the Zarafshan-Karakum Corridor of Silk Roads in Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan; the Gedeo Cultural Landscape in Ethiopia; and the Cultural Landscape of Old Tea Forestsof the Jingmai Mountain in China’s Pu’er.