The Modern Indian art movement in Indian
painting is considered to have begun in Calcutta
in the late nineteenth century.The old traditions of painting had more or less
died out in Bengal and new schools of art were
started by the British. Initially, protagonists of Indian art such as Raja Ravi
Varma drew on Western traditions and techniques including oil paint and easel
painting. A reaction to the Western influence led to a revival in primitivism,
called as the Bengal school of art, which drew from the rich cultural heritage
of India .
It was succeeded by the Santiniketan school, led by Rabindranath Tagore's
harking back to idyllic rural folk and rural life. Despite its country-wide
influence in the early years, the importance of the School declined by the
'forties' and now it is as good as dead.
British art schools
Oil and easel painting In India began in
the starting of eighteenth century which saw many European artists, such as
Zoffany, Kettle, Hodges, Thomas and William Daniell, Joshua Reynolds, Emily
Eden and George Chinnery coming out to India in search of fame and
fortune. The courts of the princely states of India were an important draw for
European artists due to their patronage of the visual and performing arts and
also their need for European style of portraits
The merchants of the East India Company
also provided a large market for native art. A distinct genre developed of
watercolour painting on paper and mica in the later half of the 18th Century
depicting scenes of everyday life, regalia of princely courts, and native
festivities and rituals. Referred to as the "Company style" or "Patna style", it
flourished at first in Murshidabad and spread to other cities of British
suzerainty. The style is considered by authorities to be "of hybrid style
and undistinguished quality".
Post-1857, John Griffiths and John Lockwood
Kipling (father of Rudyard Kipling) came out to India together; Griffith going
on to head the Sir J. J. School of Art and being considered as one of the
finest Victorian painters to come to India and Kipling went on to head both the
J. J. School of Art and the Mayo School of Arts established in Lahore in 1878.
The enlightened eighteenth century attitude
shown by an earlier generation of British towards Indian history, monuments,
literature, culture and art took a turn away in the mid-nineteenth century.
Previous manifestations of Indian art were brushed away as being
"dead" and the stuff of museums; "from the official British
perspective, India
had no living art". To propagate Western values in art education and the
colonial agenda, the British established art schools in Calcutta
and Madras in 1854 and in Bombay in 1857.
Raja Ravi
Varma
Raja Ravi Varma (1848–1906) was a
remarkable self-taught Indian painter from the princely state of Travancore.
His exposure in the west came when he won the first prize in the Vienna Art
Exhibition in 1873. Varma's paintings were also sent to the World's Columbian
Exposition held in Chicago
in 1893 and his work was awarded two gold medals. He is considered the first of
the modernists, and, along with Amrita Sher-gil (1913–1941), the main exponents
of Western techniques to develop a new aesthetic in the subjective
interpretation of Indian culture with "the promise of materiality in the
medium of oils and the reality-paradigm of the mirror/window format of easel
painting". Some other prominent Indian painters born in the 19th Century
are Mahadev Vishwanath Dhurandhar (1867–1944), Antonio Xavier Trindade
(1870–1935), Manchershaw Fakirjee Pithawalla (1872–1937), Sawlaram Lakshman
Haldankar (1882–1968) and Hemen Majumdar (1894–1948).
The work of Varma was considered to be
among the best examples of the fusion of Indian traditions with the techniques
of European academic art, in the colonial-nationalistic framework of the 19th
Century. He is most remembered for his paintings of beautiful sari-clad women,
who were portrayed as shapely and graceful. Varma became the best-known
allegorist of Indian subjects in his depiction of scenes from the epics of the
Mahabharata and Ramayana.
Raja Ravi Varma considered his work as
"establishing a new civilisational identity within the terms of 19th
Century India".:147 He aimed to form an Indian canton of art in the manner
of those of the classic Greek and Roman civilisations. Varma's art came to play
an important role in the development of the Indian national consciousness.
Varma purchased a printing press which churned out oleograph copies of his
paintings which graced the middle-class homes of India , many decades after he died.
Considered a genius in his heydey, within a few years of his passing, Varma's
paintings came under severe strictures for mimicking Western art.
Raja Ravi Varma died in 1906 at the age of
58. He is considered among the greatest painters in the history of Indian art.
Mr.Vaibhav S. Adhav
Picasso of India has came in youth face of
Mr. Vaibhav S. Adhav. The Vaibhav S. Adhav is Indian Modern Artist. And he has
made a new art form which name is Indo-Euro Modern Art.This is unique art ever
in world.He is based in India .
He has developed there art in Modern,contemporary,
Indian,European,warli,Landscape etc. Now he is future of Indian Art towords the
global platform.
The Bengal School
During the colonial era, Western influences
had started to make an impact on Indian art. Some artists developed a style
that used Western ideas of composition, perspective and realism to illustrate
Indian themes, Raja Ravi Varma being prominent among them. The Bengal school
arose as an avant garde and nationalist movement reacting against the academic
art styles previously promoted in India , both by Indian artists such
as Varma and in British art schools.
Following the widespread influence of
Indian spiritual ideas in the West, the British art teacher Ernest Binfield
Havel attempted to reform the teaching methods at the Calcutta School of Art by
encouraging students to imitate Mughal miniatures. This caused immense
controversy, leading to a strike by students and complaints from the local
press, including from nationalists who considered it to be a retrogressive
move. Havel was supported by the artist
Abanindranath Tagore, a nephew of the poet Rabindranath Tagore.
Abanindranath painted a number of works
influenced by Mughal art, a style that he and Havel believed to be expressive
of India 's
distinct spiritual qualities, as opposed to the "materialism" of the
West. His best-known painting, Bharat Mata (Mother India), depicted a young
woman, portrayed with four arms in the manner of Hindu deities, holding objects
symbolic of India 's
national aspirations. The other prominent figures of the Bengal school of art
were Gaganendranath Tagore, Abanindranath's elder brother, Jamini Roy, Mukul
Dey, Manishi Dey and Ram Kinker Baij, who is more famous as the pioneer of
Modern Indian Sculpture. Another important figure of this era was Chittaprosad
Bhattacharya, who rejected the classicism of the Bengal School
and its spiritual preoccupations. His book Hungry Bengal : a tour through
Midnapur District included many sketches of the Bengal Famine drawn from life,
as well as documentation of the persons depicted. The book was immediately
banned by the British and 5000 copies were seized and destroyed. Only one copy
was hidden by Chittaprosad's family and is now in the possession of the Delhi Art
Gallery .
During the opening years of the 20th
century, Abanindranath developed links with Japanese cultural figures such as
the art historian Okakura Kakuzō and the painter Yokoyama Taikan as part of a
globalised Modernist initiative with pan-Asian tendencies.
Those associated with this Indo-Far Eastern
model included Nandalal Bose, Benode Behari Mukherjee, Vinayak Shivaram Masoji,
B.C. Sanyal, Beohar Rammanohar Sinha, and subsequently their students A.
Ramachandran, Tan Yuan Chameli, and a few others. The Bengal
school's influence on Indian art scene gradually started alleviating with the
spread of modernist ideas post-independence.
Santiniketan
The mantle of the Bengal
School was taken up when Rabindranath
Tagore established the visionary university
of Santiniketan , a
university focussed on the preservation and upliftment of Indian culture,
values and heritage. It included an art school "Kala Bhavan" founded
in 1920–21. Though Rabindranath himself came late to painting in his long,
productive life, his ideas greatly influenced Indian modernism. In private,
Tagore made small drawings, coloured with inks, for which he drew inspiration
for his primitivism from his unconscious. In public life, Rabindranath's
primitivism can be directly attributed to an anti-colonial resistance, akin to
that of Mahatma Gandhi.
One of the early students of Abanindranath
Tagore was Nandalal Bose, who subsequently became a teacher and later the
Director for art. Nandalal led the school to a position of pre-eminence in the
nationalistic ideology now emerging in Indian culture. The Shantiniketan school
of thought emphasised that "an aesthetic was also an ethos, that art’s
role was more than life-enhancing, it was world-shaping". It established
an Indian version of naturalism distinct from the oriental and western schools,
one example being the eschewing of oil and easel painting for work on paper
drawn/coloured using watercolours, wash, tempera and ink. Rabindranath Tagore's
dream of veneration of old values, typified by motifs such as rural folk,
especially Santhal tribals, came to fruition in the art-related schools of
Viswa-Bharati University at Santiniketan. Some of the prominent artists of
Santiniketan school are Benode Behari Mukherjee, Ramkinkar Baij, Shanko
Chowdhury, Dinkar Kowshik, K. G. Subramanyan, Beohar Rammanohar Sinha, Krishna
Reddy, A Ramachandran, Shobha Brhma, Ramananda Bandhapadhyay, Dharma Narayan
Dasgupta, Sushen Ghose, Janak Jhankar Narzary .
Contextual Modernism
The idea of Contextual Modernism emerged in
1997 from R. Siva Kumar's Santiniketan: The Making of a Contextual Modernism as
a postcolonial critical tool in the understanding of an alternative modernism
in the visual arts of the erstwhile colonies like India , specifically that of the
Santiniketan artists.
Several terms including Paul Gilroy’s
counter culture of modernity and Tani Barlow's Colonial modernity have been
used to describe the kind of alternative modernity that emerged in non-European
contexts. Professor Gall argues that ‘Contextual Modernism’ is a more suited
term because "the colonial in colonial modernity does not accommodate the
refusal of many in colonized situations to internalize inferiority.
Santiniketan’s artist teachers’ refusal of subordination incorporated a counter
vision of modernity, which sought to correct the racial and cultural
essentialism that drove and characterized imperial Western modernity and
modernism. Those European modernities, projected through a triumphant British
colonial power, provoked nationalist responses, equally problematic when they
incorporated similar essentialisms."
According to R. Siva Kumar "The
Santiniketan artists were one of the first who consciously challenged this idea
of modernism by opting out of both internationalist modernism and historicist
indigenousness and tried to create a context sensitive modernism." He had
been studying the work of the Santiniketan masters and thinking about their
approach to art since the early 80s. The practice of subsuming Nandalal Bose, Rabindranath
Tagore, Ram Kinker Baij and Benode Behari Mukherjee under the Bengal School of
Art was, according to Siva Kumar, misleading. This happened because early
writers were guided by genealogies of apprenticeship rather than their styles,
worldviews, and perspectives on art practice.
Contextual Modernism in the recent past has
found its usage in other related fields of studies, specially in Architecture.
Post-independence
By the time of Independence
in 1947, several schools of art in India provided access to modern
techniques and ideas. Galleries were established to showcase these artists.
Modern Indian art typically shows the influence of Western styles, but is often
inspired by Indian themes and images. Major artists are beginning to gain international
recognition, initially among the Indian diaspora, but also among non-Indian
audiences.
The Progressive Artists' Group, established
shortly after India became
independent in 1947, was intended to establish new ways of expressing India in the post-colonial
era. Its founder was Francis Newton Souza and S. H. Raza, M. F. Husain and
Manishi Dey were early members. It was profoundly influential in changing the
idiom of Indian art. Almost all of the major artists of India in the
1950s were associated with the group. Prominent among them were Akbar Padamsee,
Sadanand Bakre, Ram Kumar, Tyeb Mehta, K. H. Ara, H. A. Gade and Bal Chabda. In
1950, V. S. Gaitonde, Krishen Khanna and Mohan Samant joined the Group. The
group disbanded in 1956.
Other famous painters like Narayan Shridhar
Bendre, K.K.Hebbar, K. C. S. Paniker, Sankho Chaudhuri, Antonio Piedade da
Cruz, K. G. Subramanyan, Beohar Rammanohar Sinha, Satish Gujral, Bikash
Bhattacharjee, Jehangir Sabavala, Sakti Burman, A. Ramachandran, Ganesh Pyne,
Nirode Mazumdar, Ghulam Mohammed Sheikh, Jahar Dasgupta, Prokash Karmakar, John
Wilkins, Vivan Sundaram, Jogen Chowdhury, Jagdish Swaminathan, Jyoti Bhatt,
Bhupen Khakhar, Jeram Patel, Narayanan Ramachandran, Paramjit Singh, Pranab
Barua, Dom Martin (the Surrealistic Painter from Goa) and Bijon Choudhuri
enriched the art culture of India and they have become the icons of modern
Indian art. Women artists like B. Prabha, Shanu Lahiri, Arpita Singh, Anjolie
Ela Menon and Lalita Lajmi have made immense contributions to Modern Indian Art
and Painting. Art historians like Prof. Rai Anand Krishna have also referred to
those works of modern artistes that reflect Indian ethos. Some of the acclaimed
contemporary Indian artists include Nagasamy Ramachandran, Jitish Kallat, Atul
Dodiya and Geeta Vadhera who has had acclaim in translating complex, Indian
spiritual themes onto canvas like Sufi thought, the Upanishads and the Bhagwad
Geeta.
Indian Art got a boost with the economic
liberalization of the country since early 1990s. Artists from various fields
now started bringing in varied styles of work. Post liberalization Indian art
works not only within the confines of academic traditions but also outside it.
Artists have introduced new concepts which have hitherto not been seen in
Indian art. Devajyoti Ray has introduced a new genre of art called
Pseudorealism. Pseudorealist Art is an original art style that has been
developed entirely on the Indian soil. Pseudorealism takes into account the
Indian concept of abstraction and uses it to transform regular scenes of Indian
life into fantastic images.
In post-liberalization India , many
artists have established themselves in the international art market like the
abstract painter Natvar Bhavsar, abstract Art painter Nabakishore Chanda, and
sculptor Anish Kapoor whose mammoth postminimalist artworks have acquired
attention for their sheer size. Many art houses and galleries have also opened
in USA and Europe
to showcase Indian artworks.
Art scholars such as Vaibhav S. Adhav, C.
Sivaramamurti, Anand Krishna, R . Siva Kumar and Geeta Kapur have taken Indian
Art to a global platform.
Source from Wikipedia
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