Ganesh Pyne, along with
Sunil Das and
Bikash Bhattacharya one of the founders of the
prestigious
Society of Contemporary Artists
of Kolkata was for a very time the most expensive artist
of India. He was born in
1937. Even though Paine had a very a difficult childhood spent mostly in
poor conditions, he had taken up art as his profession at a time when
artists were not paid much. In 1955, Ganesh Pyne joined the
Government College of Art &
Craft
, Kolkata. Though admission
was tough, Paine not only secured entry into the
college, but
also his paintings so impressed the authorities that
he was admitted straight away into the second year. It was probably the
first feather in his cap; a sign of what the man was to offer to the art
world in future.
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Initially Pyne was
influenced rather heavily by the paintings of
Abanindranath Tagore
,
which showed their mark in Pyne’s early
paintings. Amongst the western painters Pyne
was particularly influenced by Remrandt’s shadow and light fusions. Even
today Paine can be seen to create imagery where shadow and light seem to
create dreamy illusions.
Pyne in his initial days had drawn
illustrations for children’s books, painted posters for
Jatra
(a local theatre form of Bengal). But it was much later in the late
1960s that Ganesh Paine had started emerging into the Fine Art scene as
an important artist.
Pyne has influenced
artists of newer generations and one can see his influence in
the works of Shyamal Duttaroy,
Sanjay
Bhattacharya
and most young artists of Calcutta.
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Ganesh Pyne's works
show imagination and are often difficult to understand. But like many
Bengal painters Pyne too uses Bengali Mythology quite often in his
paintings.
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Medium and
technique of work
Though Ganesh Paine has
experimented with almost all types of medium, it is
temprera
paintings that have remained till date
his best. In later days, Paine also made many paintings in gouache.
Today however a large variety of works in various media including
drawings of diary pages, pastel, oil and water colour are available in
the market. But nothing ever came as close to his tempera paintings.
Ganesh Pyne’s paintings are
often multi-layered. One can see the lowest layer through the top
layers.
Major themes
Ganesh Pyne is probably the most
imaginative painter alive today. His paintings tell stories
and make the viewer ponder for a long time. Death has come
multiple times in his works as also the idea of
demons, and myths. His paintings are
more surreal
than real.
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Tuesday, 18 September 2012
Ganesh Pyne
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Ganesh Pyne
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