Shantanu Ukil at Chitralekha, Santiniketan, 2005
Photo: Vineet SabharwalIt
is ideal to write something on Shantanu Ukil and his art recounting the
days of early 20th century advent of Bengal School in northern India
and the pioneering contribution of Ukil Brothers in making the new
capital of modern India a prominent centre of cultural activities during
pre and post-independence years. Without these details the narrative
would be kind of incomplete.
Beginning of Modern Indian Art in Delhi
Shantanu’s father
Sarada Ukil (1889-1940), an early student of
Abanindranath
and originally from Bikrampur, Dhaka had migrated to Delhi in 1918. He
subsequently joined his friend Lala Raghubir Singh’s Modern School (est.
1920), located at 24, Daryaganj, as its first art teacher. Later, at
his then residence 287 Esplanade Road in Chandni Chowk, Sarada
established his modest studio and an art tuition centre for aspiring
youngsters to initiate them into the nationalistic aesthetics of
Abanindranath Tagore’s Bengal School.
At the Doorway, black ink on asbestos sheet, Shantanu Ukil
Photo: Mukul Dey ArchivesHistorically,
this was the first ‘bold effort” to sow the seeds of modern Indian art
at an arid geographical location, which was then “virtually a
desert culturally”.
Promoting Indian Artists & Craftsmen
The Ukil’s School of Art that Sarada established in 1926 had an adjunct, All India Fine Arts
& Crafts Society (
AIFACS)…
which, conceptually, was an ancestor of today’s state-run Lalit Kala
Akademi, with constant activities to promote Indian artists and
craftsmen with their works.
Thus during 1930s, when Shantanu was
just a youngster, the Ukil’s household in New Delhi was the hub of
important affairs, as far as the art scenario was concerned in the new
capital of British-India.
Recounting those days, Dr.
M. S. Randhawa, the noted scholar on Indian art wrote:
“Organization
of an annual art exhibition in 1930 was his (Sarada Ukil’s – Ed.) next
venture. This art exhibition which is a landmark in the history of
promotion of art in New Delhi was opened by the Viceroy Lord Willingdon
and was patronized by the Chief Commissioner Sir John Thompson. It was a
major venture in popularizing art and 1500 works by over 400 artists
from all over India were displayed. (vide. Roopa Lekha, Vol. L, No.s 1 & 2, 1978-79, p.7)”.
Kunti Deserting Karna, Acrylic wash on paper, Shantanu Ukil
Photo: Mukul Dey Archives
Samarendranath Gupta of Lahore, Asit Kumar Haldar of Lucknow, Sailen
Dey of Jaipur, Hemendranath Mazumdar from Patiala and Mukul Dey of
Calcutta, amongst many others, who had often frequented the Ukils in
New Delhi.
It was also during these years (1936-37) that Barada
Ukil, Sarada’s younger brother and Shantanu’s uncle, had promoted Amrita
Shergil at one of the
AIFACS shows in the
hutments adjacent to Connaught Place, subsequent to their trip in
southern states of India together. This was much before Shergil came in
mutually intimate and appreciative contact with Jawaharlal Nehru. (vide.
N. Iqbal Singh, ‘Amrita Sher-Gil’, in Roopa Lekha, vol.
LIII, No.s 1&2, 1982, p.58).
Publication of Roopa Lekha
Meanwhile,
another very important step to popularize art was taken by the Ukil
brothers. In July 1939, and after the publication of Rupam was
discontinued in Calcutta, the
AIFACS came out
with their bi-annual illustrated art journal Roopa Lekha (Vol. 1, Serial
No. 1)…the first ever periodical from northern India entirely devoted
to the cause of fine arts.
The editorial board consisted of
Ananda K. Coomaraswamy,
James H. Cousins, Ajit Ghose, Karl Khandalavala, G.
Birbhum Village, watercolour on paper by Shantanu Ukil, 1993.
Photo: Mukul Dey ArchivesVenkatachalam
and Barada Ukil. The periodical’s cover was designed by Kumudini Devi,
Ukil’s mother, which carried typical traditional Bengali motifs such as
lotus, conch-shell and Goddess Lakshmi’s footmarks. Reckoning by any
standard this was a very major event in the modern Indian art history…as
important as the publication of
O. C. Gangoly’s Rupam from Calcutta.
Shantanu Joins his Father’s School
Sarada’s
premature death in 1940 was a heavy blow to the Ukil family and their
activities. While the joint family had shifted to Calcutta and Varanasi
temporarily, the Ukil’s School of Art (later Sarada Ukil School of Art)
and
AIFACS managed its existence in New Delhi
with the active and faithful support of the prominent disciples of
Sarada, Anil Roychowdhury, Indu Bhushan Ghosh and Sushil Sarkar.
Landscape of Delhi with Turco-Afghan Monument, watercolour on paper by Shantanu Ukil, 1993.
Photo: Mukul Dey ArchivesShantanu,
Sarada’s eldest son and the only one who took to painting according to
family tradition, had taken his first lessons in Indian painting from
these three disciples of his father on his return to Delhi in 1946.
He
joined his father’s art school as a student of both Indian and western
painting, and was fortunate to train under illustrious Sailoz Mukherjea,
who was in the faculty of Sarada Ukil School of Art (erstwhile Ukil’s
School of Art) at 66/1 Queensway, New Delhi. From 1946 till 1951
Shantanu remained a student here.
The First Break-through for Shantanu
The
first major break-through came young Shantanu Ukil’s way when right
after the diploma his works were included in the exhibition of Indian
art in Japan, which was opened at the Ueno
Shahjahan’s dream of the Taj, Shantanu Ukil
Photo: Mukul Dey ArchivesNational Museum, Tokyo on July 22, 1952 by
Shigeru Yoshida, the then
PM
of the island nation. In quick succession, his works were also included
in one of the biggest Indian art exhibitions that had ever taken place
on a foreign land. This was in July-August, 1953.
The
Indian art exhibition in Soviet Russia in 1953 was significant for
several reasons. Quite unlike the 1946 exposition at South Kensington,
London, this exhibition in Russia had included several works by the
contemporary young artists of the land in its grand entourage. It was
clear that the organisers were keen to revive the Indian art scenario by
promoting the younger generation of artists who had fresh and
newer outlook.
This was important because at that time independent
India was just a seven year old nation. Also, if not anything else,
this exhibition gave a clear indication of Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru’s foreign policy with its cultural overtone and emulation of
Soviet socialism as the desirable form of economy that India could
strive for.
Important news coverage of this monumental show came
from art critic Shibdas Banerji’s pen in Amrita Bazar Patrika, in July
1953, which is worth more than a passing mention.
Shantanu’s Paintings Receive Acclaim
Baul Singer, oil on canvas, Shantanu Ukil
Photo: Mukul Dey ArchivesThe
Indian art exhibition in Soviet Russia was one of the first major
events in Shantanu Ukil’s career. His Indian paintings (Bengal School)
got international acclaim and found a place in the permanent collection
of the famed Hermitage Gallery of Moscow. Back in India, a series of
important exhibitions followed, with much appreciation from the press
and foreign and Indian art lovers.
In quick succession his works
were acquired in the collections of Maharaja of Bikaner, Maharaja of
Baroda, Mysore Art Museum, Chandigarh Museum, Prime Minister’s
Secretariat, Ministry of Information
& Broadcasting and Rashtrpati Bhavan between 1951 to 1968.
Meanwhile
outside India, apart from Moscow, his paintings were collected in
Museum of Finland, Denmark, Cairo, Poland, China, Japan,
USA, Italy, Switzerland, Romania and scores of other countries.
Transition of an Artist
Though
trained in the western style of painting under such stalwart as Sailoz
Mukherjea, until late 1950s Shantanu Ukil executed his works primarily
in the “wash technique”, as
Landscape of Delhi with Turco-Afghan Monuments. watercolour on paper by Shantanu Ukil, 1993.
Photo: Mukul Dey Archivespopularized by Abanindranath Tagore and Bengal School.
Quite
like his father, he is essentially a colourist, but with bolder
drawings and swifter execution, which have been the characteristic of
his Indian paintings. Hindu, Buddhist and Muslim legends, folklore and
life, along with the aura of Mughal Delhi’s afterglow influenced
Shantanu deeply.
Shantanu was keen to depict the life and colours
of Delhi villages amid the shades of cool greens under the neem trees.
Or, perhaps the splashes of vermillion and the cascading gold on the
branches of gulmohur and amaltaas amid the ruins of Lodi’s Delhi. These
visual sensibilities were undoubtedly the aesthetic seeds that Sailoz
had sowed in his student’s mind. They sprang to life at a later point of
time in Shantanu’s career.
Mother and Child, Shantanu Ukil
Photo: Mukul Dey ArchivesOn
the other hand, the romanticism and the inherent rhythm of the
aboriginal Santhal life in Bengal and Bihar so inspired Shantanu that he
created some of his finest works on their life, while often
experimenting with medium, form, pigments and surface texture.
Today,
the aged artist fondly recounts his days in New Delhi when at the
premises of Sarada Ukil School of Art, he along with his contemporaries,
Saradindu Sen Roy, Sukumar Bose, Arup Das, Ramnath Pasricha, Biren De,
Abani Sen, Bimal Dasgupta and Harinarayan Bhattacharya would happily
indulge in their respective artistic pursuits, often going out together
to do sketches on life in Delhi villages. These villages later got
absorbed into the burgeoning metropolis of present New Delhi.
Also,
there was the occasional but magnetic presence of Manishi Dey as well,
with his monumental and sensitive works on Bengal refugees. Manishi was a
close friend of Sailoz and the stories of their bohemian life together
could easily fill volumes!
Shantanu has a very great regard for this master artist, about whom he says, people seldom understood!
Famine, Shantanu Ukil
Photo: Mukul Dey Archives(Unfortunately,
in an era of all-encompassing consumerism, it seems there are few who
could possibly be interested in such anecdotes…more so, when as a nation
we have done so little in the areas of preserving our oral history and
its proper documentation!—Ed.)
There was a time when Sarada Ukil
School of Art was a center of much important art activities. Here,
eminent artists and scholars such as Stella Kramrisch,
artist Qi Baishi of China and
Nicholas Roerich visited to exchange their thoughts and techniques with Indian counterparts. In 1952, the
AIFACS
had organized the Chinese Art Exhibition when Qi Baishi visited India
and the interaction Shantanu had with him is still fresh and cherished
in his memory.
In 1956, India celebrated 2500 years of Lord
Buddha’s Parinirvana in a big way when prominent artists of the day were
involved in an important exhibition, where Shantanu Ukil and Saradindu
Sen Roy had opted for Italian egg tempera process to do their paintings
on the guidelines from fabled treatise of
Cennino Cennini (1370-1440), as translated by
C. J. Herringham of Ajanta Frescoes fame (India Society, 1915). Their visual idiom was strictly according to the tenets of Indian Shilpashastras and Tagore’s Bengal School.
Rythm of Life, Shantanu Ukil
Photo: Mukul Dey ArchivesHowever,
just a year later, in 1957, there was a drastic change in the flavour
and quality of Shantanu’s creative output. While visiting his in-laws
(Mukul Dey and his wife Bina) at “Chitralekha”, Santiniketan he came
into contact with artist Kiron Sinha and his Austrian wife Gertrude at
their architecturally stimulating studio-cum-gallery amid the undulating
khoai land adjacent to their compound.
Kiron, though an ex-student of Kala-Bhavana, was far removed from the visual language of
Nandalal Bose and
his batch of students. Instead, he was quite a rebel in his thought and
life-style and had vigorously experimented with the neo-Impressionistic
imagery with Paul Signac and Seurat’s pointillism.
Kiron was bold
and had a fabulous palette, recalls Shantanu - light mauve, emerald,
umber, vermillion and black. Kiron’s favourite subject were the Santhals
of Birbhum - in all their vitality, flesh, sweat and blood! Shantanu
was inspired deeply by Kiron’s works.
Santhal Life, Shantanu Ukil
Photo: Mukul Dey ArchivesThus,
from the late-1950s and during the following decade one finds a
pronounced change in Ukil’s visual idiom. The delicate yet controlled
lines and subtle much-washed hues of Bengal School gradually gave way to
the forceful spatula-work of thick impasto with mysterious chiaroscuro
of the artist’s immediate environment. It was as if Shantanu got a
sudden and tremendous freedom from the shackles that held him fast to
rock hard traditions.
It was a freedom that had compelled him to
explore an essentially newer palette! Similarly, the artist’s earlier
inspiration from India’s Hindu and Buddhist past were gradually replaced
by the images from his direct personal experience. He transformed the
emotions into vermillion, deep purple, mauve, viridian, gamboge and
umber directly, while forming a vigourous reading habit to keep abreast
with literature, history and philosophy.
His marriage with Mukul Dey’s daughter Manjari, who did her research in the areas of foreign influences on ancient Indian history and culture from Visva-Bharati University, was a constant source of much inspiration, recalls Shantanu.
Shantanu got an opportunity to study the various trends of European art in first-hand when he was included in an
AIFACS
organized cultural delegation that attended the 4th Centenary
Celebrations of Dresden Museum in erstwhile East Germany in 1960-61.
Back in India, he organized his first show with paintings done in oil in
September 1963, New Delhi.
At the pond, Shantanu Ukil
Photo: Mukul Dey ArchivesWhile reviewing the exhibition the noted critic and art historian Keshav Malik wrote in Thought (September 14, 1963):
“The
first thing that strikes as one enters the hall housing this exhibition
is the undoubted skill of the painter. Every work has a neat finish and
nothing is left in any doubt; no self-indulgence here in any
inadvertent or conscious confusion of forms. And yet, it will be seen
that Shantanu is neither an illustrator nor a traditional.”
Truly,
that was the beginning of a journey in an entirely new direction. An
aesthetic journey that is rich with the artist’s visual experiences
intertwined with the joys and sorrows of his life - a journey the artist
is still continuing with.
Forever in search of the nuances of
light, colour, texture and form, Shantanu Ukil had travelled widely in
his country and abroad to enrich his mind. In 1982 he was invited to
Japan on a Japan Foundation grant to deliver lectures on Indian art.
This lecture series at Fukuoka, Kyoto and Tokyo was much appreciated.
Ukil
feels that an artist is absolutely free to try out newer styles,
techniques and visual idioms with the usage of unconventional surface
and medium as it catches his fascination. It is ridiculous to
straightjacket him in any particular category.
He declares,
“An
artist has to have the curiosity of a child…and a mind to play with his
medium, and an ability to marvel and wonder at the life around”.
Santhal Dance, acrylic on canvas by Shantanu Ukil, 2005.
Photo: Mukul Dey ArchivesIndeed,
an artist must have an ability to marvel! Though not an unknown name in
India, Shantanu Ukil had a solitary existence throughout his artistic
career. He never belonged to any group really. At times he exhibited,
and often not. During mid-1990s, after a gap of about a decade, Shantanu
was introduced to the art lovers of Mumbai by his younger son Shivashri
who coaxed the artist out of his shell and had his show organized in
the business capital of India.
The result was a tremendous
success. The whole exhibition was sold out. Not only that his works were
acquired by top Mumbai collectors, he got a fabulous press as well!
Beat Aeschlimann playing guitar at Chitralekha, Santiniketan. Watercolour wash-painting on paper by Shantanu Ukil, early 1970s.
Photo: Mukul Dey ArchivesDr. Mulk Raj Anand wrote about the artist in 1999:
“Artist
Shantanu Ukil belongs to the family of Ukil Brothers who played
important part in the resurgence of Indian painting in the years before freedom.
Although they were rooted in Bengal, they spread out and
were able to bring influences from West and elsewhere to bear upon
Indian painters. The association of Barada Ukil with Amrita Sher-Gil
proved to be significant. The other brothers were commissioned by
Government to do frescoes in India House, London.
Shri Shantanu
Ukil is the heir to Ukil tradition. He has travelled widely, lived in
the west, and, now, brings to painting technique the new acrylic medium,
which seems to evoke layers of form by juxtaposition of colours, so
that paintings become near sculturesque.
This technique is very
suitable for the figures in our country, because the vitality of the
human beings, in various moods, comes through almost dramatically.
Roughness of form, recreated in the new technique, makes for
action-pictures and for dramatic presentation of people, specially folk,
in human form”.
The artist passed away in his studio at Santiniketan in May 2006.