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B Prabha
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"It is my aim to paint the trauma and tragedy of women"
B. Prabha was born in the village of Bela, near Nagpur in Maharashtra in 1933. Growing up in a close-knit middle-class family, she studied at the Nagpur School of Art and went on pursue a Diploma in Painting and Mural Painting from the Sir J.J. School of Art, Mumbai. Although she worked mostly with oils on canvas, this modern painter did explore several media,...
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"It is my aim to paint the trauma and tragedy of women"
B. Prabha was born in the village of Bela, near Nagpur in Maharashtra in 1933. Growing up in a close-knit middle-class family, she studied at the Nagpur School of Art and went on pursue a Diploma in Painting and Mural Painting from the Sir J.J. School of Art, Mumbai. Although she worked mostly with oils on canvas, this modern painter did explore several media, styles and subjects before finally settling with oils as her preferred medium. Following her phase of experimentation, Prabha developed an elegant, formal style that remains her trademark. Her paintings cover a wide range of subjects, from landscapes to social issues like droughts, hunger and homelessness. A significant component of Prabha’s body of work is the artist’s self-conscious attempt to immortalize the plight of women in her country.
Prabha’s signature style fully evolved after her marriage to fellow artist B. Vithal in 1956, when she moved from modern abstract forms to a more decorative figuration. She held her first joint exhibition with her husband the same year. It is interesting to note that B. Prabha was a practicing female artist in an age where women were unapologetically oppressed, and it is no surprise therefore that Prabha used her own position as an artist to make strong comments on the same. While her work today might seem like a simple documentation of the figures of rural women, it must be taken into account that a few decades ago these might have been odes to the spirit and the plight of these women.
B. Prabha held two solo shows at Delhi’s Kumar Gallery in 1959 and 1961. In 1993, her solo exhibition ‘Shradhanjali’ in Mumbai was dedicated to her late husband B. Vithal. Prabha’s work was included in the group exhibition ‘Contemporary Indian Painters’ at Jehangir Art Gallery in Mumbai in 1996. She was also a part of Bombay State Art Exhibition in 1958 where she was awarded the first prize. B. Prabha passed away in 2001.
Posthumously, her work has been included in shows like ‘Winter Moderns’ at Aicon Gallery, New York; and ‘Pot Pourri’ at Gallery Beyond, Mumbai, both in 2008.
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Born
1933
Bela Maharashtra
Died
2001
Mumbai
Education
Nagpur School of Art
1954-55 Government Diploma in Painting and Mural Painting, Sir J.J School of Art, Mumbai
Exhibitions
Selected Posthumous Exhibitions
2012 'Art for Humanity',...
Selected Posthumous Exhibitions
2012 'Art for Humanity', Coomaraswamy Hall, Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya, Mumbai
2011-12 'Modernist Art from India: The Body Unbound', Rubin Museum of Art, New York
2011 'Ethos V: Indian Art Through the Lens of History (1900 to 1980), Indigo Blue Art, Singapore
2011 'B Prabha: From the Album', The Viewing Room, Mumbai
2011 'Celebrations 2011', Kumar Gallery, New Delhi
2008 ‘Winter Moderns’, Aicon Gallery, New York
2008 ‘Pot Pourri’, Gallery Beyond, Mumbai
Selected Solo Exhibitions
1993 ‘Shradhanjali’, dedicated to Late Husband B Vithal at Mumbai
1961 Kumar Gallery, New Delhi
1959 Kumar Gallery, New Delhi
Selected Group Exhibitions
1996 ‘Contemporary Indian Painters 1996’, Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1957 Kumar Gallery, New Delhi
Joint Exhibitions
1956 With B Vithal at Mumbai
Participations
1958 Bombay State Art Exhibition, Mumbai
Honours and Awards
1958 First Prize at the Bombay State Art Exhibition
Received All India Fine Arts and Crafts Society (AIFACS) Award, New Delhi
1958 First Prize at the Bombay State Art Exhibition
Received All India Fine Arts and Crafts Society (AIFACS) Award, New Delhi
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