cover image: A Street Scene Near a Temple

20.500.12592/2f1612

A Street Scene Near a Temple

It is a modern painting created by Gaganendranath depicting a street scene near a temple, with a range of strokes in tonal variations capturing the rhythm and pattern of the image. It is created by using watercolors on paper. It is now an exhibit in the National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi.
artwork modern painting
Identifier
ngma-02015
Material
Watercolour, Paper
Note
Born to the family of Tagore's of Jorasanko, Kolkata, Gaganendranath was the elder brother of Abanindranath Tagore. With little formal training in art Gaganendranath began painting at an advanced age. He was inspired by the calligraphic brushwork and the wash technique of the visiting Japanese artists, Yokoyama Taikan and Hishida Shunsho. In the early 20's of the Twentieth century, Gaganendranath responded positively to the European modernist idiom. He began painting seriously when he started illustrating his uncle Rabindranath Tagore's autobiography in 1911. Gaganendranath like his younger brother Abanindranath and uncle Rabindranath had a wide range of interests that covered theatre, fantasy and the like. He also practiced photography and this can be seen in the use of light and shadows in his paintings. From 1917 onwards he did a series of satirical caricatures of changes taking place in the society of his times. Many of his paintings were referred to as 'cubist' because of the division of the figures and ground into geometrical planes. Gaganendranath painted portraits, landscapes, caricatures, abstract and 'cubist' paintings.
Pages
24.8 X 34.5 cm
Published in
India
Type
Painting