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Bhabesh
Chandra Sanyal
Self Portrait 1988
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The white bearded, somewhat frail, vastly elegant gentleman is a familiar
figure not just in Delhi or India but all over the world art arena.
Bhabesh Chandra Sanyal, widely known as B C Sanyal and affectionately
as Bhabeshda turned 100 in April this year.
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On his birthday, April 22nd, the cream of the art world gathered at Mati
Ghar, Indira Gandhi National Centre for Arts, New Delhi to celebrate and
felicitate this living legend. To mark the occasion, they also put together
an exhibition of paintings called “100 visual tributes to Bhabeshda”.
This had paintings from over a 100 artists from Anjolie Ela Menon to Jatin
Das, from Kishan Khanna to Sankho Chowdhury, from Manjit Bawa to Satish
Gujral and included some of B C Sanyal’s rare paintings – a show which
symbolised the regard and affection the Indian art world has for Bhabeshda.
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At 100, B C Sanyal has seen it all. Right from being on the Indian art
scene from the time of colonial influence, through the neo Bengal styles
of the Tagores, through the flux filled times of the modernist movement,
this doyen of art imprinted his own unique style on the canvas of contemporary
Indian art.
Born in Dibrugarh, Assam at the turn of the century, B C Sanyal studied
at the Government School of Art and Craft Calcutta. Always a rebel, he
could not align to the styles of the Bengal School or classical Victorian
and started expressing in his own way. This unique style earned him a
commission to make a statue of Lala Lajpat Rai for the 1929 Congress session
at Lahore. Sanyal thereafter settled down in Lahore itself and taught
at the Mayo School of Arts. Many a prominent figure in art today have
been inspired by him -- Satish Gujral, Kishan Khanna to name a few.
In 1936, Sanyal left Mayo and set up Lahore School of Fine Arts -- his
studio cum school where he taught and painted till Independence. In 1947,
during the partition, he migrated to Delhi where he worked and taught
at a small studio in Gole Market. This “refugee studio” became a nodal
point for promising artists of the time and from this confluence of art
was born Delhi Shilpi Chakra in 1949, India’s first non - governmental
body of artists. A group that ushered in a new era of contemporary art
under the inspiring leadership of Sanyal.
The decades that followed, saw in B C Sanyal a trailblazer and pathbreaker.
From heading the Delhi Polytechnic to being secretary of the Lalit Kala
Academy, Sanyal was all – a painter, a sculptor, a visionary art administrator
and a teacher and led the way to uniqueness, freshness, experimentation
unbounded and innovative expression in Indian art. In his own paintings,
B C Sanyal always maintained basic honesty and essential simplicity and
gave expression through vibrant fresh colours. A deep love for nature
and closeness to rural India came out very strongly in most of his paintings.
In the many years behind him, B C Sanyal has an unending list of international
shows and exhibitions, fellowships and assignments, awards accolades and
honours including the Padmabhushan in 1984. And of course, an unending
list of inspired artists -- generations given the impetus to break free.
As India moves ahead in
the new millennium, so does Bhabeshda as he picks up his brush and adds
yet another indelible stroke on India’s canvas.
Milestones
1929 – 1936 Mayo School of Fine Art, Lahore
1936 – 1947 Lahore School of Art
1949
Show at Salon de Mai,
Paris
1949
Founding of Delhi Shilpi Chakra
1953
Participated at Venice Biennial
1953 – 1960 Professor and Head of Dept. of Art, Delhi Polytechnic
Advisor to Govt of Nepal for their School of Art
1955 – 1956 Organised exhibition of Indian art in East European countries
1959
Leaders Exchange Programme lecture tour USA / Canada / Europe
1960 – 1969 Secretary, Lalit
Kala Akademi, New Delhi
Exhibited in Sao Paolo, Brazil
International Congress of Art, New York
Visited Japan for Indian art as guest of the K.B.S
Cultural tour to Fed Republic of Germany and other European
countries
International Congress of Art Tokyo – led Indian delegation
Study tour with ‘Documents Kessel’ West Germany and European Art
Centres
Studied art in the Ky and Tabo monasteries in Spiti Valley
1980
Fellowship of Lalit Kala Akademi
1984
Padmabhushan awarded by Govt of India
1989
“Gagan-Abani Award” from Vishwa Bharati University, Shantiniketan
1989
Honorary Citizenship of Baltimore, USA
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