ABSTRACT

Eloquent Spaces adopts the twin analytic of meaning and community to write a fresh history of building in early India. It presents a new perspective on the principles and practices of early Indian architecture.

Defining it broadly over a range of space uses, the book argues for architecture as a form of cultural production as well as public consumption. Ten chapters by leading archaeologists, architects, historians and philosophers, examining different architectural sites and landscapes, including Sanchi, Moodabidri, Srinagar, Chidambaram, Patan, Konark, Basgo and Puri, demonstrate the need to look beyond the built form to its spirit, beyond aesthetics to cognition, and thereby to integrating architecture with its myriad living contexts. The volume captures some of the semantic diversity inherent in premodern Indian traditions of civic building, both sacred and secular, which were, however, unified in their insistence on enacting meaning and a transcendent validity over and above utility and beauty of form. The book is a quest for a culturally rooted architecture as an alternative to the growing crisis of disembededness that informs modern praxis.

This volume will be of interest to scholars and practitioners of architecture, ancient Indian history, philosophy, art history and cultural studies.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

Towards a semantics of architecture

chapter 2|21 pages

Form, Space and Consciousness

Architectural principles in the Vastushastras

chapter 3|35 pages

Breathing Life into Monuments of Death

The stupa and the ‘Buddha body’ in Sanchi’s socio-ecological landscape 1

chapter 5|17 pages

The Old Temple of Basgo, Ladakh

A hypothesis on the superimposition of ‘celestial assembly’ on sculpture and sangha 1

chapter 7|16 pages

Stepwells in Western India

Ranki Vav at Patan

chapter 8|21 pages

Outer Places, Inner Spaces

Constructing the gaze in Chola Chidambaram

chapter 10|18 pages

On the Water’s Edge

Tracing urban form in old Srinagar