"Brigitte Singh: Princess of the Mughal Garden" talks about how Singh approached her craft, peeling off dusty layers from the long-obscured story of block printing in the subcontinent.
The book, edited by graphic designer-photographer Bishwadeep Moitra and published by Mapin, is a sort of visual biography of Singh and her work.
It has essays by museologists, textile designers and scholars such as Jasleen Dhamija, Laila Tyabji, Rosemary Crill, Aleta Bartel, Michel Beihn, Jacqueline Jacques, Chandramani Singh and Sheela Reddy, who talk of different aspects of Singh's work and life.
"The passion that Brigitte Singh nurtures for this art dates back to her first journey to India in the late eighties, when she came to study Indian miniatures and was enamoured by the resemblance of the 17th-century cloth from Provence to the Mughal cloth, made popular by traders who travelled the spice route," he writes in the book's foreword.
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Her marriage into an aristocratic Rajput family and an entirely different culture, her struggles to establish quality and work ethos in a declining craft tradition among other things could have discouraged a lesser person, she says.
"But sustained by her inner voice, a love for India and her craft, and a refusal to settle for anything less than the best, Brigitte Singh has emerged triumphant and unique," Tyabji writes.
Singh first came to Sanganer, Jaipur's hand-block- printing centre, as a student of miniatures three decades ago.
Her exquisite work with block prints is a form of re- enacted design history, rendered in visual rather than textual terms. Uncovering and reaching down to the purer forms, to the composite aesthetic of the 18th century, it offers a singular source of access to a seminal design.
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