- TAGR Systems is a Canadian based technology company specializing in Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) for asset tracking. We help organizations save money and gain efficiencies in their supply chain and asset management operations by providing automated, accurate, real time visibility for their products movements and locations.
- Data is stored to make the interaction between users and websites faster and easier. For example, a shopping website might use cookies to remember your registration details, making your next visit quicker and easier, and to save you the trouble of entering your details again.
With Tagr you can easily edit information such as a song’s artist, title, or album cover. Tagr also allows you to control the way your files are named. Davinci resolve studio 16 1 0b. Tagr features an integration with discogs.com, which allows you to search for album information and artwork, and to apply it to your songs. Version 4.6.2: Features.
Below is a list of free tools that I have used and found useful at any point in time in my trading journey:
Tagr 4 6 20
Finviz.com – I use this everyday for it’s free stock screener. there is also a paid ad free version with extra bells and whistles but I’ve never made the leap
stockcharts.com – their free ChartSchool is a great start for all things technical analysis
https://app.prntscr.com/en/index.html (LightShot) – free screen shot tool. create a folder and take pictures of every single one of your trades to improve and look back on
tweetdeck.twitter.com – the best and worst tool on the internet. you can get access to some of the best traders in the world **but please be very very cautious who you give your hard earned money to from there
chatwithtraders.com – you aren’t doing yourself any favors if you don’t listen to people that have done what you are trying to accomplish
Houdahspot 4 1 – advanced file search tool. traderfeed.blogspot.com – can’t say enough amazing things about this blog that has been going strong since 2005. Steenbarger’s blog and books transformed the way I thought about and approached trading
futurestrader71.com/video-archive – no one explains probabilities as well as FT71 & if you trade futures his free material is a must (check out his chatwithtraders interview as well)
Books – there are tons of great trading books but these are the ones I’ve read more than once and will likely read again in the near future
- Market Wizards Series – Schwager (the original chatwithtraders)
- The Daily Trading Coach – Steenbarger
- Trading In The Zone – Douglas
- One Good Trade – Bellafiore
- Trade Your Way To Financial Freedom – Tharp
- Come Into My Trading Room – Elder
- Secrets To Emotion Free Trading – Levin (focuses on visualization techniques so may be woowoo to some)
- Trend Following – Covel
Not specifically about trading but great books that helped me along the way
- Think and Grow Rich (TAGR) – Hill
- Mastery – The Keys to Success and Long-Term Fulfillment – Leonard
- The Power of Self-Discipline – Tracy
- The Power of Habit – Duhigg
Abanindranath Tagore | |
Born | 7 August 1871 Joransanka, Calcutta, Bengal, British India (now in West Bengal, India) |
---|---|
Died | 5 December 1951 (aged 80) |
Nationality | Indian |
Known for | Painting, writing |
Notable work | Bharat Mata; The Passing of Shah Jahan |
Movement | Bengal school of art, Contextual Modernism |
Abanindranath TagoreCIE (অবনীন্দ্রনাথ ঠাকুর) (7 August 1871 – 5 December 1951) was the principal artist and creator of the 'Indian Society of Oriental Art'. He was also the first major exponent of Swadeshi values in Indian art, thereby founding the influential Bengal school of art, which led to the development of modern Indian painting.[1][2] He was also a noted writer, particularly for children. Popularly known as 'Aban Thakur', his books Rajkahini, Budo Angla, Nalak, and Khirer Putul were landmarks in Bengali language children's literature and art.
Tagore sought to modernise Mughal and Rajput styles to counter the influence of Western models of art, as taught in art schools under the British Raj. Along with other artists from the Bengal school of art, Tagore advocated in favour of a nationalistic Indian art derived from Indian art history, drawing inspiration from the Ajanta Caves. Tagore's work was so successful that it was eventually accepted and promoted as a national Indian style within British art institutions.
Personal life and background[edit]
![Tagr 4 6 2 x 4 Tagr 4 6 2 x 4](https://epaper.dainikekmat.com/imageprocessor?image=https:%2F%2Fepaper.dainikekmat.com%2Fuploads%2Fepaper%2F2020-10%2F5f87405c7f42f.jpg&width=400&height=300&cropratio=4:3)
Abanindranath Tagore was born in Jorasanko, Calcutta, British India, to Gunendranath Tagore and Saudamini Tagore. His grandfather was Girindranath Tagore, the second son of 'Prince' Dwarkanath Tagore. He was a member of the distinguished Tagore family, and a nephew of the poet Rabindranath Tagore. His grandfather and his elder brother, Gaganendranath Tagore, were also artists.
Tagore learned art when studying at Sanskrit College, Kolkata in the 1880s.
In 1890, around the age of twenty years, Abanindranath attended the Calcutta School of Art where he learnt to use pastels from O. Ghilardi, and oil painting from C. Palmer, European painters who taught in that institution.[3]
Tagr 4 6 2 X 2
In 1889, he married Suhasini Devi, daughter of Bhujagendra Bhusan Chatterjee, a descendant of Prasanna Coomar Tagore. At this time he left the Sanskrit College after nine years of study and studied English as a special student at St. Xavier's College, which he attended for about a year and a half.
He had a sister, Sunayani Devi.[4]
Painting career[edit]
'Ganesh-janani' by Abanindranath Tagore
Early life[edit]
In the early 1890s several illustrations were published in Sadhana magazine, and in Chitrangada, and other works by Rabindranath Tagore. He also illustrated his own books. Around 1897 he took lessons from the vice-principal of the Government School of Art, studying in the traditional European academic manner, learning the full range of techniques, but with a particular interest in watercolour. At this time he began to come under the influence of Mughal art, producing a number of works based on the life of Krishna in a Mughal-influenced style. After meeting E. B. Havell, Tagore worked with him to revitalise and redefine art teaching at the Calcutta School of Art, a project also supported by his brother Gaganendranath, who set up the Indian Society of Oriental Art.
Tagore believed in the traditional Indian techniques of painting. His philosophy rejected the 'materialistic' art of the West and came back to Indian traditional art forms. He was influenced by the Mughal school of painting as well as Whistler's Aestheticism. In his later works, Tagore started integrating Chinese and Japanese calligraphic traditions into his style.
Later career[edit]
Tagore believed that Western art was 'materialistic' in character, and that India needed to return to its own traditions to recover spiritual values. Despite its Indocentric nationalism, this view was already commonplace within British art of the time, stemming from the ideas of the Pre-Raphaelites. Tagore's work also shows the influence of Whistler's Aestheticism. Partly for this reason many British arts administrators were sympathetic to such ideas, especially as Hindu philosophy was becoming increasingly influential in the West following the spread of the Theosophy movement. Tagore believed that Indian traditions could be adapted to express these new values, and to promote a progressive Indian national culture.
His finest achievement however was the Arabian Nights series which was painted in 1930. In these paintings he uses the Arabian Nights stories as a means of looking at colonial Calcutta and picturing its emergent cosmopolitanism.[5]
With the success of Tagore's ideas, he came into contact with other Asian cultural figures, such as the Japanese art historian Okakura Kakuzō and the Japanese painter Yokoyama Taikan, whose work was comparable to his own. In his later work, he began to incorporate elements of Chinese and Japanesecalligraphic traditions into his art, seeking to construct a model for a modern pan-Asian artistic tradition which would merge the common aspects of Eastern spiritual and artistic cultures.[6]
Rabindranath Tagore, Uccelli migranti, Carabba, 1918
His close students included Nandalal Bose, Samarendranath Gupta, Kshitindranath Majumdar, Surendranath Ganguly, Asit Kumar Haldar, Sarada Ukil, Kalipada Ghoshal , Manishi Dey, Mukul Dey, K. Venkatappa and Ranada Ukil.
For Abanindranath, the house he grew up in (5 Dwarakanath Tagore Lane) and its companion house (6 Dwarakanath Tagore Lane) connected two cultural worlds – 'white town' (where the British colonizers lived) and 'black town' (where the natives lived). According to architectural historian Swati Chattopadhay, Abanindranath used the Bengali meaning of the word, Jorasanko ('double bridge') to develop this idea in the form of a mythical map of the city. The map was, indeed, not of Calcutta, but an imaginary city, Halisahar, and was the central guide in a children's story Putur Boi (Putu's Book). The nineteenth-century place names of Calcutta, however, appear on this map, thus suggesting that this imaginary city be read with the colonial city as a frame of reference. Curio 11 4 3 – brainstorming and project management app. The map used the structure of a board game (golokdham) and showed a city divided along a main artery; on one side a lion-gate leads to the Lal-Dighi in the middle of which is the 'white island.'[7]
Abanindranath maintained throughout his life a long friendship with the London-based artist, author and eventual president of London's Royal College of Art, William Rothenstein. Arriving in the autumn of 1910, Rothenstein spent almost a year surveying India's cultural and religious sites, including the ancient Buddhist caves of Ajanta; the Jain carvings of Gwalior; and the Hindu panoply of Benares. He ended up in Calcutta, where he drew and painted with Abanindranath and his students, attempting to absorb elements of Bengal School style into his own practice.[8]
However limited Rothenstein's experiments with the styles of early Modernist Indian painting were, the friendship between him and Abanindranath ushered in a crucial cultural event. This was Rabindranath Tagore's time living at Rothenstein's London home, which led to the publication of the English-language version of Gitanjali and the subsequent award to Rabindranath in 1913 of the Nobel Prize for Literature.
The publication of Rabindranath Tagore's Gitanjali in English brought the Tagore family international renown, which helped to make Abanindranath's artistic projects better known in the West.
Abanindranath became chancellor of Visva Bharati in 1942.[9]
Rediscovery[edit]
Within a few years of the artist's death in 1951, his eldest son, Alokendranath, bequeathed almost the entire family collection of Abanindranath Tagore's paintings to the newly founded Rabindra Bharati Society Trust that took up residence on the site of their famous house on No. 5, Dwarakanath Tagore lane. In a situation where only a small number of the artist's paintings had been collected or given away in his lifetime, the Rabindra Bharati Society became the main repository of Abanindranath's works of all periods. Banished into trunks inside the dark offices of the society, these paintings have remained in permanent storage ever since. As a result, the full range and brilliance of Abanindranath's works has never be effectively projected into a public domain. They remained intimately known only to a tiny circle of art connoisseurs and scholars in Bengal, some of whom like K. G. Subramanyan and R. Siva Kumar have long argued that the true measure of Abanindranath's talent is to be found in his works of the 1920s, 30s and 40s but could do little to offer up a comprehensive profile of the master for the contemporary art world. R. Siva Kumar's Paintings of Abanindranath Tagore (2008) is a path-breaking book redefining Abanindranath's art.
List of paintings[edit]
A list of paintings by Abanindranath Tagore:[10]
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- Bharat Mata (c. 1905)
- The Passing of Shah Jahan (1900)
- My Mother (1912–13)
- Fairyland illustration (1913)
- Journey's End (c. 1913)
References[edit]
- ^John Onians (2004). 'Bengal School'. Atlas of World Art. Laurence King Publishing. p. 304. ISBN1856693775.
- ^Abanindranath Tagore, A Survey of the Master’s Life and Work by Mukul Dey, reprinted from 'Abanindra Number,' The Visva-Bharati Quarterly, May – Oct. 1942.
- ^Chaitanya, Krishna (1994). A history of Indian painting: the modern period. Abhinav Publications. p. 145. ISBN978-81-7017-310-6.
- ^'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 29 November 2011. Retrieved 20 May 2009.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^Siva Kumar, R. (2008). Paintings of Abanindranath Tagore. Pratikshan Books. p. 384. ISBN81-89323-09-1. Archived from the original on 2 March 2014.
- ^Video of a London University Lecture detailing Abanindranath's Importance to Global Modernism, London University School of Advanced Study, March 2012.
- ^Swati Chattopadhyay, Representing Calcutta: Modernity, Nationalism, and the Colonial Uncanny. Routledge 2006.
- ^Rupert Richard Arrowsmith, 'An Indian Renascence and the rise of global modernism: William Rothenstein in India, 1910–11', The Burlington Magazine, vol.152 no.1285 (April 2010), pp.228–235.
- ^Samsad Bangali Charitabhidhan (Biographical Dictionary), Chief Editor: Subodh Chandra Sengupta, Editor: Anjali Bose, 4th edition 1998, (in Bengali), Vol I, page 23, ISBN81-85626-65-0, Sishu Sahitya Samsad Pvt. Ltd., 32A Acharya Prafulla Chandra Road, Kolkata.
- ^Unattributed. 'Abanindranath Tagore Biography'. iloveindia.net. Retrieved 11 December 2011.
External links[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Abanindranath Tagore. |
- Works by or about Abanindranath Tagore at Internet Archive
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