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Dr Vivek Gupta

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A young Indian man in a floral shirt smiles at the camera

Vivek Gupta is British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at 果冻影院 where he researches connected book histories across South, Central, and West Asia (ca. 1100鈥攑resent). From 2020 to 2023, he served as Postdoctoral Associate at University of Cambridge, where he continues to co-direct a research and exhibition project at the Fitzwilliam Museum, with Senior Curator, Dr Suzanne Reynolds. Since 2020, he has also collaborated with several organizations in India to produce the webinar,

Vivek鈥檚 first book, Worldshaping Wonders: Manuscripts and Experience in Hindustan, will be based on his 2020 PhD thesis. This book argues that the experience of wonder was central to shaping, educating, and transforming worlds in Hindustan. His second project, Manuscript as Monument: Inscribing Orality in Muslim South Asia (ca. 1300鈥1550), is the primary subject of his work at 果冻影院. This study focuses on a calligraphic practice indigenous to India known as Bihari and its relationship to performance in devotional spaces.


Contact Details

Office: TBC
Office Hours: By appointment
Email:听vivek-gupta@ucl.ac.uk听
Website:


Appointment

British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow
Dept of History of Art
Faculty of S&HS


Research Themes

Islam, South Asia, Indian Ocean; transculturation; affect and experience; manuscript studies; scribal knowledge; Arabic, Persian, and Hindavi; translation and circulation; intersections between art and science; decolonial nonmodern; 鈥榞lobal medieval, early modern;鈥 鈥榣udic鈥 arts or the arts of play.听

Research


Vivek Gupta鈥檚 research lies at the intersection of Islamic and South Asian visual culture and literature. His fields of philological expertise are Arabic, the nonmodern Urdu-Hindi vernaculars, and Persian. His publications frequently include original translations of inscriptions, poetry, and manuscript evidence. His work covers a range of topics including affect and experience, transculturation, the ludic arts, multilingualism, concepts of the vernacular, intermediality, intersections between art and science, and the cultures of the Indian Ocean.听

Vivek鈥檚 first book, Worldshaping Wonders: Manuscripts and Experience in Hindustan, will be based on his 2020 PhD thesis. This book argues that the experience of wonder was central to shaping, educating, and transforming worlds in Hindustan. His second project, Manuscript as Monument: Inscribing Orality in Muslim South Asia (ca. 1300鈥1550), is the primary subject of his work at 果冻影院. This study focuses on a calligraphic practice indigenous to India known as Bihari and its relationship to performance in devotional spaces.

Currently, he co-directs a research and exhibition project at the Fitzwilliam Museum, with Senior Curator, Dr Suzanne Reynolds, , which will culminate in a co-edited book and exhibition display. At Jesus College鈥檚 West Court Gallery, Vivek curated , which featured听an outdoor sculptural installation and new paintings in response to the collection of the Fitzwilliam Museum.听

Since 2020, Vivek has collaborated with several nonprofits in India to produce the webinar, The focus of this scholarly engagement has been to make new research on the Deccan freely available to a global public. It seeks to bring together research on both the Northern and Southern Deccan regions of India cutting across Hindu, Muslim, Jain, and Buddhist material cultures.

Selected Publications

Book

Worldshaping Wonders: Books and Visual Knowledge in Hindustan, under contract with Oxford University Press in the British Academy Monographs Series, expected 2026.

Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles

鈥淚nterpreting the Eye (鈥榓in): Poetry and Painting in the Shrine of A岣ad Sh膩h al-Wal墨 al-Bahman墨 (r. 1422鈥1436),鈥 Archives of Asian Art 67 no. 2 (2017): 189鈥208.

Peer-Reviewed Book Chapters (independent review process starred)

鈥淯nfinished Hyperboles! Adam鈥檚 Footprint in Sri Lanka and Wonder on the Edge of Modernity,鈥 in Iran and Persianate Culture of the Indian Ocean World, ed. A.C.S. Peacock, 275鈥300, London: Bloomsbury, 2025.

鈥淏ook Culture of Sultanate South Asia: Transcreated Genres, Regions, Scribal Practices, and Vernaculars,鈥 The Oxford Handbook of the Mughal World, ed. Richard M. Eaton and Ramya Sreenivasan, New York: Oxford University Press, expected 2024.

鈥淗ow Persianate Is It? A World-Making Book Transcreated from Iraq to India,鈥 Persian Cultures of Power and the Entanglement of the Afro-Eurasian World, ed. Matthew P. Canepa, 238鈥256, Los Angeles: Getty Publications, 2024.

鈥淚nscribing Orality: Calligraphy, Layout and the Vernacular Anxieties of the Chandayan Manuscripts,鈥 in The Chandayan, 42鈥55, Mumbai: Marg Publications, 2024.*听
Reviews in: The Hindu, Open Magazine, Scroll.in.

鈥淐ontemporary Appropriations of the Illustrated Manuscript: Shahzia Sikander鈥檚 Disruption as Rapture,鈥 in Intersections: Art and Islamic Cosmopolitanism, ed. Melia Belli Bose, 173鈥204, Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 2021.

鈥淪plendour of the City, Nagarshobha: Textile Culture of Mughal Burhanpur,鈥 in Reflections on Mughal Art and Culture, 229鈥253, New Delhi: Niyogi Books, 2020.*

Book Reviews

The Courts of the Deccan Sultanates: Living Well in the Persian Cosmopolis by Emma J. Flatt, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, May 17, 2021.

by Heidi Pauwels, caa.reviews, November 29, 2017.听

Exhibition Catalog

Shahzia Sikander: Unbound. Cambridge: HRH Prince Alwaleed Centre for Islamic Studies, 2021.

Entries

鈥淲onder (鈥榓jab),鈥 Khamseen: Islamic Art History Online, September 24, 2024.

鈥淢ount Qaf and the Angel,鈥 co-written with Ursula Sims-Williams, in Alexander the Great: The Making of a Myth, ed. Richard Stoneman, London: The British Library, 2022, p. 235.听

鈥淭he Mouse and the Cat (Mush u Gurbih) by 鈥楿bayd Zakani (1319鈥70)鈥 in Masterpieces at the Jaipur City Palace Museum, eds. Giles Tillotson and Mrinalini Venkateswaran, 2022, pp. 78鈥81.

鈥淕hul膩m 鈥楢l墨 鈥溎z膩d鈥 Bilgr膩m墨,鈥 and 鈥 鈥楢bd al-Q膩dir Bad膩'奴n墨鈥 in Encyclopedia of Indian Religions, eds. Arvind Sharma et al. 2018.

Select Public Writing

The Art Newspaper No. 356 (May 2023): 5.听Featured on the 鈥淓xperts鈥 page.

The Art Newspaper,听August 12, 2022, co-authored with Aparna Kumar.

Entries on the British Library Asian and African Studies Blog

听July 8, 2020.听

June 24, 2019.

Teaching and Supervision

Vivek enjoys teaching courses on Islamic art and architecture, South Asian art and architecture, the Indian Ocean world, manuscript studies, transculturation and mobility, world-making objects, and theory and method. As an expert on manuscripts, he loves to take on challenging texts in Arabic, Persian, or Urdu-Hindi with small groups of students, and frequently includes his own translations on course syllabi.听

From 2020 to 2023 Vivek was the primary instructor for the following courses at University of Cambridge, shared between the History of Art and Asian and Middle Eastern Studies departments:

Timurids to Eco Futurism: Indian Ocean in Focus (Spring 2023, one semester, undergrad/grad)

Islamic Art and Architecture: Routes, Roots, and New Frontiers [Autumn 2021-Spring 2022, two semesters, undergrad (Term 1: Prophet to Mongols, Term 2: Mongols to Modernism)]

For Cambridge鈥檚 curricula in History of Art and Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, Vivek has offered lectures on a variety of subjects in team-taught courses including: Timurid, Mughal, Deccan and Rajput history and visual culture, Islamic manuscripts, Indian painting, urbanism, numismatics, textiles, and objects in the collections of the University Library and Fitzwilliam Museum.听

He has supervised undergraduate theses on a range of topics, most recently on 鈥淟ocating the Body between Architecture and Diagram: The Function of Talismans in Indo-Islamicate Manuscripts (ca. 1550-1700),鈥 and 鈥淐ultural Encounters between English and Mughal Empires.鈥 He frequently guides graduate students based in the US, UK, and India working on Islamicate South Asia and manuscript studies.

Biography

Vivek Gupta is British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at 果冻影院 where he researches connected book histories across South, Central, and West Asia (ca. 1100鈥攑resent). From 2020 to 2023, he served as Postdoctoral Associate at University of Cambridge, where he continues to co-direct a research and exhibition project at the Fitzwilliam Museum. His first book, Worldshaping Wonders: Manuscripts and Experience in Hindustan, will be based on his 2020 PhD thesis. And, his second project, Manuscript as Monument: Inscribing Orality in Muslim South Asia (ca. 1300鈥1550), is the primary subject of his current fellowship.

Vivek鈥檚 crash course in working with objects was when he had the privilege of serving as a Research Assistant in the Metropolitan Museum of Art鈥檚 Department of Islamic Art for the exhibition Sultans of Deccan India, 1500鈥1700 (2015), shortly after which he was named a Smithsonian Fellow at the National Museum of Asian Art, Washington, DC. Since then, he has worked in a variety of collections and archives across the world, and his expertise has often won him research consulting stints. Still, his favorite place of study remains the British Library, where he is frequently found.听

In collaboration with his students, Vivek recently curated at Jesus College, Cambridge (2021-22), which focused on themes of historical painting practices, transnational feminism, and decolonization. He installed a public sculpture, Sikander鈥檚 Promiscuous Intimacies (2020), outdoors for the first time at Jesus College and had the artist create original works in response to Cambridge鈥檚 archives. , currently in planning at the Fitzwilliam Museum with Senior Curator, Dr Suzanne Reynolds, will reanimate the performance milieus of musicians, poets, and dancers through a multilingual songbook (Urdu, Braj, Panjabi, Persian) made for an Englishwoman.

Prior to his PhD in History of Art at SOAS, University of London (2020), Vivek earned a BA in Arabic and Comparative Literature at Washington University in St. Louis (2010) during which and after he lived in Egypt and worked on Arabic Literature under the supervision of Professor Mohamed Salah Omri (Oxford). He was awarded an MA in Comparative Literature (Persian/Hindi) from Columbia University (2016).

Vivek loves difficult languages, research, writing, curating exhibitions, and working with objects. When not in a library, he is often found by the sea somewhere in Goa or Greece.