A Triangular Encounter: Nemai Ghosh, Benodebehari Mukherjee and Satyajit Ray,
presented by 1x1 Art Gallery
presented by 1x1 Art Gallery
Set of Black and White Photographs
Last year I was sent a set of black and white photographs by Nemai Ghosh (1936), taken during the shooting of The Inner Eye by Satyajit Ray (1921-1992). The documentary was Ray’s homage to the Bengali painter Benodebehari Mukherjee (1904-1980). On examining the set, I was unsure as to what I could say meaningfully about it. But as I gradually delved into these photographs a story began to unravel. That story was about the taking of these pictures and what they meant to the film-maker and the painter. - Partha Mitter
Benodebehari
Mukherjee
Born as he was with weak eyesight, Benodebehari underwent an
eye surgery in 1956. The operation was successful but he completely lost his
eyesight due to an accident during the period of recovery. Nothing could have
been more tragic for an artist at the height of his powers, but he stood up to
it with characteristic stoicism.
LIMITED EDITION
BOOK
Essay by Professor Partha Mitter
Professor Partha Mitter is Research Professor of Art History at the University of Sussex. His research focuses on connections between Indian art and national identity and he was recently awarded an AHRB research grant for a collaborative project entitled Modernity and National Identity in Art: India, Japan and Mexico, 1860s-1940s. Professor Mitter has been a Visiting Scholar at the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles and he also lectures around the world, notably Columbia University, Princeton University, and Oxford and Cambridge Universities. Recent publications include Indian Art (Oxford University Press, 2001); Art and Nationalism in Colonial India, 1850-1922: Occidental Orientations (Cambridge University Press, 1994); Much Maligned Monsters: a History of European Reactions to Indian Art, (University of Chicago Press, 1992).
No comments:
Post a Comment