Artist: Rabindranath Thakur
Date: 1929
Size: 182 x 192 cm
Museum: National Gallery of Modern Art (New Delhi, India)
Technique: Paper
Rabindranath Tagore was primarily known as a writer, poet, playwright, philosopher and aesthetician, founder of a unique educational institution, Visva- Bharati, music composer and choreographer. Tagore’s emergence as a painter began in 1928 when he was 67 years old. Beginning with scratchings and erasures on the pages of his manuscripts during the mid-20s of the 20th Century, he slowly moved towards drawing and painting independent images. Between 1928 and 1940, Rabindranath painted more than 2000 images. He never, gave any title to his paintings however, in the collection of the NGMA they have been titled by the institution. Fed by memories and the subconscious, Rabindranath’s art was spontaneous and dramatic. His images did not represent the phenomenal world but an interior reality. Rabindranath veered towards abstraction in his figuration. Expressionism in European art and the primitive art of ancient cultures inspired him. Fantasy, wild imagination and an innate feel for the absurd gave a distinctive character to his visual language.Tagore also had a strange fascination for geometrical shapes, which is manifested in several of his paintings which are marked by upward thrusting shapes, protruding beaks, and pointed triangles. This is one of the most striking abstract head studies with a strong architectonic quality. There is considerable whimsy in this monochromatic work.
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