Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram
Dressed in a simple kurta,artist Shuvaprasanna greets people with a smile,his hands folded in a namaskar. Perhaps it is this sense of humility that has led him to hold back on having a retrospective of his works till now. At 65,Shuvaprasanna is finally presenting a variety of works from the early 1960s to the present,at Lalit Kala Akademi,under the promotion of Gallerie Nvya and Art Indus. The show will travel to Mumbai,Kolkata,Bangalore and Chennai.
While his manner may be reticent,Shuvaprasannas early work is feral and potent. Many of the large canvases on display are dark portraits of Kolkata,the city he loves and hates. It was a dark time with the Naxalite movement and Bengal in a state of flux. Born and brought up in Kolkata,I could not ignore its vibrations or the faces of its people. But tragedy and comedy are two sides of the same coin,so even my early work moves from the tragic to the comic, says the artist who got his big break in 1974 when German collector Rudi Kartel became his patron.
While his early works are gritty,his later celebratory,Krishna series,tends to border on the decorative. Ive tried to develop my own sensitivity around depicting mythology,I dont want it to become illustrative,which is why I have used pure colour and no ornamentation, says Shuvaprasanna. Nonetheless,the recent works lack the vigour of his earlier canvases and etchings. The etchings,however,exhibit a fine draftsmanship as he renders his favourite themes of crows,cats,birds and flowers in the time-consuming medium of acid bite on zinc plate.
Limited edition prints are available for R 2.25 lakh for a set of 12 small prints,and R 2.50 lakh for eight large prints.
The exhibition is on till March 3 at Lalit Kala Akademi.
Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram