Nabakishore
Nabakishore Chandra's paintings seem to emanate from the earth itself despite the intricacy of lines that seem to domicate them. The pristine quality of the faces that emerge from the lines startle us with their freshness which reminds us of vernal showers at times. On the other hand, a sense of mystery seems to tease us out of thought as we gaze at some of the paintings, perplexed by the serpentine quality of the lines. The subdued colours evoke a sence of mellow understanding about the intriguing flow of life, its elusiveness and its beauty.
Having his roots in rural Bengal, Nabakishore understands life in its primal and natural essence as well the complexities that come in its way as life gathers experencies and understanding.
Debdutta Gupta
Art Critic
India Today
Discover contemporary artworks by Nabakishore, browse recent artworks and buy online. Categories: contemporary indian artists. Artistic domains: Painting. Account type: Artist , member since 2008 (Country of origin India). Buy Nabakishore's latest works on Artmajeur: Discover great art by contemporary artist Nabakishore. Browse artworks, buy original art or high end prints.
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View allIn this presentation I have created a primordial ambiance through faces of the 'naive girl next door' of rural Bengal, where a sense of freedom of the colour and style aptly blends with joy of the human mind.
Recognition
Biography
Nabakishore Chandra's paintings seem to emanate from the earth itself despite the intricacy of lines that seem to domicate them. The pristine quality of the faces that emerge from the lines startle us with their freshness which reminds us of vernal showers at times. On the other hand, a sense of mystery seems to tease us out of thought as we gaze at some of the paintings, perplexed by the serpentine quality of the lines. The subdued colours evoke a sence of mellow understanding about the intriguing flow of life, its elusiveness and its beauty.
Having his roots in rural Bengal, Nabakishore understands life in its primal and natural essence as well the complexities that come in its way as life gathers experencies and understanding.
Debdutta Gupta
Art Critic
India Today
- Nationality: INDIA
- Date of birth : 1964
- Artistic domains:
- Groups: Contemporary Indian Artists
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About the artist
For Nabakishore,painting is the spontaneous expression of the creative impulse within him. A self trained artist, this latent ability was unleashed one fine day, when he was urged by a friend to complete a painting he was casually working on. From then on, Nabakishore began his rendition of beautiful, mythopoeic paintings dominated by lines and colours.
Born in 1964 on 4th January in a remote village of West Bengal, his emergence as an artist was not very easy as from childhood itself he had to fight against tremendious financial odds. Today he is a senior lecturer in a South Kolkata College and also a budding name in the field of painting. He has earned accolades from renowned artists and has many exhibitions to his credit. He has also designed covers of books and his works has recently being used in a documentary on Shakti Chattopadhyay.
Versification in line and colour
Line is the forte of Nabakishore's paintings. They swirl, surge, intertwine, even retreat and move diagrammatically covering the pictorial place. Nabakishore lets his pen or brush move on the paper freely. The figures born out of those lines and of the exuberant colour splashes have a naive charm about them. They show faces of a next-door girl or of a folk deity and recall the images that we see in folk art of rural Bengal. In his paintings, symbols including the phallic ones create a primodial ambience. His browns and yellows, reds and greens trapped in the darkness make up a righ fabric of forms.
Nabakishore is a self-taught painter who teaches Bengali language and literature in a college. His knowledge of medieval Bengali poetry is simply reflected in the images that he paints. As a painter, he recreates the world of mythology and folklore in a visual language that seems unique.
Professor Sovon Som
(Art Critique & Art Historian)
Bewitching Lines
Nabakishore Chandra's paintings seem to emanate from the earth itself despite the intricacy of lines that seem to domicate them. The pristine quality of the faces that emerge from the lines startle us with their freshness which reminds us of vernal showers at times. On the other hand, a sense of mystery seems to tease us out of thought as we gaze at some of the paintings, perplexed by the serpentine quality of the lines. The subdued colours evoke a sence of mellow understanding about the intriguing flow of life, its elusiveness and its beauty.
Having his roots in rural Bengal, Nabakishore understands life in its primal and natural essence as well the complexities that come in its way as life gathers experencies and understanding.
Debdutta Gupta
Art Critic
India Today
THE TELEGRAPH wednesday,26 sept.20007.
Timeout
Inspired strokes
Another Life is proof of Nabakishore Chanda’s fascination with life as he has inherited it. A self-taught artist, he displays amazing mastery over life’s diverse, beautiful forms that inspire him to express himself through art. With little exposure to artistic traditions, his tryst with colours is a spontaneous outpouring of his personal imagination. Embellished with extremely deft strokes, his works feature persistent mythical motifs, while laying equal emphasis on the traditional patas of Bengal. Undoubtedly, the most interesting feature of his works is his use and choice of colours. His paintings articulate a synthesis of multiple languages, mesmerising viewers with the promise of many untold stories and unheard songs. The works on show are done in ink, water-colour and acrylic, both on paper and canvas. One among them, Fabric of Life appears above.
Event: An exhibition of paintings by Nabakishore Chanda When: Till September 28; 4 pm - 8 pm Where: Samokal Art Gallery, 23 Gariahat Road, 1st floor, Gol Park
art
Article
Solo Exhibition:-(1)2004Birla Academy of Art & Culture,kolkata,India(2)2007-Samokal Art Gallery,Kolkata,India(sponsored)(3)2008-PegasusArt Gallery,Hyderabad,India(sponsored).
Group Exhibition:-
1. 2003 - Academy of Fine Arts Kolkata, India.
2. 2003 - Lalit kala Academy, New Delhi, India.
3. 2005 - Chemold Art Gallery, Kolkata, India.
4. 2005-06 - Abstract Art Gallery, Bangalore, India. (sponsored)
5. 2006 - Genesis Art Gallery, Kolkata India. (sponsored)
6. 2006 - Academy of Fine Arts, Kolkata, India.
7. 2006 - New Times Book & Arts Shop, Kolkata, India. (sponsored)
8. 2006 - Gallery 79, Kolkata, India. (sponsored)
9. 2006 - Gallery 79, Kolkata, India. (sponsored)
10. 2007 - Ashutosh Birth Centenary Hall, Kolkata, India. (sponsored)
11. 2007 - Metropolitan Art Saloon, Kolkata, India.
12. 2007 - 25th Baisakh Art Gallery, Kolkata, India.
13. 2007 - Gallery 79, Kolkata, India. (sponsored)
14. 2007 - Birla Academy of Art & Culture, Kolkata, India. (sponsored)
ANNUAL EVENT AND WORKSHOP
=========================
1. 2003 - Rajya Charukala Parsad. W.B., India.
2. 2006 - Rajya Charukala Parsad. W.B., India.
3. 2007 - Rajya Charukala Parsad. W.B., India.
4. 2006 - Flower Show, Forest Dept., Govt. of W.B., India.
5. 2003 - Achin Patua, Street Exhibition, Kolkata, India.
6. 2006 - Ichhapur Artist Forum, WB. India.
7. 2007 - Achin Patua, Street Exhibition, Kolkata, India.
8. 2007 - Oriental Society of India Art, Kolkata, India (Guest Artist).
BOOK COVER DESIGN AND OTHERS
============================
1. Calcutta Tramwayman - Dr. Siddhartha Guha Roy.
2. Naljatak - Rabin Pyne.
3. 2007 - Saradiya Joka Samachar.
4. Paintings have been used in a documentary on Shakti Chattopadhyay, directed by Suranjan Roy.
COLLECTION
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Kolkata, Delhi, Alipurduar, Baroda, Hyderabad, Bangalore, Barong (Sikkim), Oman, Liverpool, Manchester, Washington.
ARTICLE OF PROFESSOR SOVON SOM
'VERSIFICATION OF LINE AND COLOUR'
Line is the forte of Nabakishore's paintings. They swirl, surge, intertwine, even retreat and move diagrammatically convering the pictorial space. Nabakishore lets his pen or brush move on the paper freely. The figures born out of those lines and of the exuberant colour splashes have a naive charm about them. They show faces of a next-door girl or of a folk deity and recall the images that we see in folk art of rural Bengal. In his paintings, symboils including the phallic ones create a primordial ambience. His browns and yellows, red and greens trapped in the darkness make up a rich fabric of forms.
Nabakishore is a self taught painter who teaches Bengali language and literature in a college. his knowledge of medieval Bengali poetry is simply reflected in the images that he paints. As a painter, he recreates the world of mythology and folklore in a visual language that seems unique.
Press Coverage
view_news.php?nid=1829&cid=5&sid=67#
The Kolkata-based painter’s
work is like a multi-hued patchwork
quilt stretching from one canvas
to another, in undulating, swirling lines
The end goal in life is clear for Nabakishore Chanda. "The day I discover I have done my masterpiece, I'll stop painting," he says. And, until that momentous occasion arrives, he will continue to infuse life into lines, colour into gaps and meaning into images. And show them off to the world.
A faculty member of the Sri Vivekananda College in Kolkata, Nabakishore is in Hyderabad to exhibit his paintings at the Pegasus Art Gallery. A self-taught artist, Nabakishore's artistic journey began in a remote village in West Bengal, as a child who dipped into ink to draw his first perceptions of life around him. "Some of my contemporaries, critics and artists, suggested that I should not seek training so late since it would corrupt my flow. But I practise, study art books and do model study. Great artists, of course, are my inspiration too," he says.
This is the first time that Nabakishore is showing his work in Hyderabad but he has held many solo and group exhibitions before, since 2003. He has a series of shows planned in the coming months, including two more in Hyderabad.
The image of a woman is predominant in almost all his paintings. "Woman is genesis. The mother, the wife, the daughter. Life for me begins and ends with a woman." Everyday images are his forte, captured in strong lines and earth tones. The images stand out as stark statements on first look and then melt into abstraction with the second. Watercolours on paper, acrylic on canvas and bold use of ink lines and hatching are the aspects of his technique.
Though the paintings are mainly steeped in rural milieu, the occasional urban study captures the angst as well as the bland anonymity of city life with equal impact.
Bengal's patachitra in vegetable colours is what influenced him most. "My art did not happen just one fine morning. It has been a journey and I absorb and take impressions and influences with me as I travel," the artist says. He believes whatever he has seen of Andhra and Hyderabadi Deccani art as well as his impressions of Hyderabad will reflect in his work somewhere down the line.
The 44-year-old artist, who is a sculptor too though he is yet to display his work, laments the loss of rocks in and around Hyderabad. "Yet, the city draws me, may be because it is different from Kolkata. Or may be it is an entirely new imagery," Nabakishore says.
By Usha Revelli