"Stone carving is really one of the great accomplishments of India's architecture. The jali is part of that larger rock cutting and carving tradition. It has a special place because it wasn't just a decorative feature. It filtered light onto the most sacred spots around the graves and shrines of saints and created a kind of metaphorical language which involved the interaction of light and shadow in the creation of spaces and in the experience of space for the people who visit these shrines. The jali, for me, also becomes a kind of key to the way the mind thinks in India -- not always directly approaching things but through layers, filters and frameworks that exist" - Navina Najat Haider, author, 'Jali; Lattice of Divine Light in Mughal Architecture' talks to Manjula Narayan about palaces, Sufi shrines, contemporary jalis, the traditional craftsmen whose skills continue to be passed down through generations, and more
280 Episodes
18 Nov 2024
45 MINS
18 Nov 2024
Books & Authors with Mytheli Sreenivas, author, Reproductive Politics and the Making of Modern India
51 MINS
18 Nov 2024
52 MINS
18 Nov 2024
54 MINS
18 Nov 2024
41 MINS
18 Nov 2024
Books & Authors with Rajesh Kasturirangan, authors of Who Are We? An Enquiry Into The Indian Mind...
51 MINS
18 Nov 2024
43 MINS
18 Nov 2024
45 MINS