In June 1881, plans were submitted to the University of Oxford's Hebdomadal Council to build an Indian Institute. The original site was occupied by four old buildings. The building was designed by Basil Champneys and the first section opened in 1884. Originally there was a low shop to the south, but neighbouring Hertford College has now encroached on the Institute with a much taller building. The Institute was built of Milton stone in the style of the English Renaissance, with different oriental details to the designs of Champneys. In 1974 Nikolaus Pevsner observed that the rounded corner cupola made an excellent point de vue at the east end of Broad Street.
His 1954 work ‘Untitled’ (GramYatra) fetched Rs 118 crores at a sale by the auction house Christie’s on Wednesday; this is the highest ever price commanded by an Indian artist at an auction ever.
“We expect this upward momentum to continue, on the back of the foreign institutional investors’ return to the Indian market amid attractive valuations and signs of economic recovery,” he said.Also Read .
Later, the delegation held discussions with the senior officials at the IndianInstitute of Technology, Madras on various topics including fostering joint research initiatives, student mobility programmes, industry-academia partnerships among others.
... spaces accounted for only 40%, shared T V Ramachandra, a researcher from the IndianInstitute of Science, Bengaluru.'However, as cities expand rapidly, the balance has shifted dramatically.
These institutions will be engaged in high level visits to Indian universities and research institutions, and jubilee celebrations of the RegionalOffice of DAAD in India.