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Krishen Khanna
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Born in 1925 in what is now Faislabad in Pakistan, Krishen Khanna grew up in Lahore, only studying art after he graduated from college at evening classes held at the Mayo School of Art there. In 1947, Khanna’s family moved to Shimla as a result of the Partition of India and Pakistan, and Khanna was deeply affected by not only the change in his personal life, but also the socio-political chaos that reigned around him. His early works are...
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Born in 1925 in what is now Faislabad in Pakistan, Krishen Khanna grew up in Lahore, only studying art after he graduated from college at evening classes held at the Mayo School of Art there. In 1947, Khanna’s family moved to Shimla as a result of the Partition of India and Pakistan, and Khanna was deeply affected by not only the change in his personal life, but also the socio-political chaos that reigned around him. His early works are reproductions of the scenes that were indelibly imprinted in his memory during this period.
Most of Khanna’s work is figurative; he chose to not explore the abstraction that most of his contemporaries were delving into. In an interview with Saffronart he said “I used to do abstracts earlier and I have now moved on to human forms. I thought that the person or the individual is being neglected – the person in a particular situation who is influenced by the conditions around. I want to now emphasise the human beings caught up in their particular condition.”
Bordering on the narrative, Khanna’s work captures moments in history, much like photographs do, but the artist’s technique is far from photo-realist. Khanna transfers his observations onto the canvas with spontaneity and exuberance, keeping the representational elements of his subject matter intact. The artist’s use of colour and his expressionist brushwork make the mundane rise to the challenge of the creative.
A largely self-taught artist, Khanna studied at the Imperial Service College, Windsor, England, from where he graduated in 1940. After his family's move to India, a job with Grindlays Bank brought him to Bombay where he was invited to be a part of the now famous Progressive Artists’ Group. The first exhibition in which Khanna’s works were featured was one of this Group’s exhibitions held in 1949. In 1955, Khanna had his first solo show at the USIS, Chennai, and since then has been exhibiting his work widely in India and abroad. Among his solo exhibitions are Krishen Khanna: Drawings & Paintings at Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi, in 2016; When the Band Begins to Play... at Grosvenor Gallery, London, in 2015; A Celebration of Lines at Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai, in 2013; Krishen Khanna: A Retrospective presented by Saffronart, Mumbai at Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi, in 2010; The Savage Heart at Cymroza Art Gallery, Mumbai, in 2008; Krishen Khanna, Saffronart and Berkeley Square Gallery, London, in 2005; and An Airing at Pundole Art Gallery, Mumbai, in 2004. Recent group exhibitions include Ideas of the Sublime, presented by Vadehra Art Gallery at Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi, in 2013; The Discerning Eye: Modern Masters at Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi, in 2013; and Masterclass at Dhoomimal Art Gallery, New Delhi, in 2011.
In 1964, Khanna was artist-in-residence at the American University, Washington D.C. In 1965, he won a fellowship from the Council for Economic and Cultural Affairs, New York following the travel grant they had awarded him three years earlier. Recognising his immense contribution to Indian Art, the Government of India has bestowed several honours upon him including the Lalit Kala Ratna from the President of India in 2004 and the Padma Shri in 1990.
Krishen Khanna lives and works in New Delhi.
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Born
1925
Lyalpur, Punjab
Education
Self taught artist 1940 Imperial Service College, Windsor, England Punjab University, Lahore
Exhibitions
Selected Solo Exhibitions 2016 'Krishen Khanna: Drawings &...
Selected Solo Exhibitions 2016 'Krishen Khanna: Drawings & Paintings', Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi2015 'When the band begins to play...', Grosvenor Gallery, London2013 'A Celebration of Lines', Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai2010 'Krishen Khanna: A Retrospective', presented by Saffronart, Mumbai at Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi 2008 'The Savage Heart', Cymroza Art Gallery, Mumbai 2005 Saffronart and Berkeley Square Gallery, London 2004 'An Airing' Pundole Art Gallery, Mumbai 2001 Kumar Art Gallery, New Delhi 2001 Saffronart and Pundole Art Gallery, New York 1995 Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai 1994 Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi 1991 Gallery Espace, New Delhi 1989 Centre for Contemporary Art, New Delhi. 1986 Exhibition of drawings and paintings at Sarla Art Centre, Chennai 1983 Exhibition of drawings, Garhi Studio, New Delhi 1980 Rabindra Bhavan, Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi 1979 Dhoomimal Art Gallery, New Delhi 1975 Dhoomimal Art Gallery, New Delhi 1974 Black Partridge, New Delhi 1973 Pundole Gallery, Mumbai 1969 Photographs, Kunika-Chemould, New Delhi 1969 Experimental Photographs, Pundole Gallery, Mumbai 1966 Kumar Art Gallery, New Delhi 1965 Egan Gallery, New York 1964 Kumar Art Gallery, New Delhi 1964 Watkins Art Gallery, American University, Washington D.C. 1962 Kunika Art Centre 1962 Leicester Galleries, London 1961 Ashoka Gallery, Kolkata 1961 Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai 1960 Kumar Art Gallery, New Delhi 1960 Leicester Galleries, London 1959 Kumar Gallery, New Delhi 1958 Kumar Gallery, New Delhi 1957 All India Fine Arts and Crafts Society (AIFACS), New Delhi 1955 USIS, Chennai
Selected Group Exhibitions 2013 'Ideas of the Sublime', presented by Vadehra Art Gallery at Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi
2013 'Edge of Reason- and beyond, into pure creativity', presented by Indian Art Circle at Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi 2013 'The Discerning Eye: Modern Masters', Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi 2012 'Talking Heads', Art Alive Gallery, New Delhi2011 'The Art of Drawing', The Guild Art Gallery, Mumbai 2011 'Masterclass', Dhoomimal Art Gallery, New Delhi 2010-11 'A Collection', Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai 2010 Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai
2010 '10 x 10', Gallery Threshold, New Delhi 2010 'Black is Beautiful', India Fine Art, Mumbai2010 'Essential, Eclectic,...Ephemeral', The Harrington Mansions, Kolkata 2009 'Bharat Ratna! Jewels of Modern Indian Art', Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 2009 'Master Class', The Arts Trust, Mumbai 2009 'Sacred and Secular', India Fine Art, Mumbai 2009 'Kalpana: Figurative Art in India', presented by The Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) at Aicon Gallery, London; The Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) 2008 'Faces', Tao Art Gallery, Mumbai 2008 'Baisakh 08', Polka Art Gallery, New Delhi 2004 ‘Concept and Form’, Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi 2003 Exhibition of drawings, Pundole Art Gallery, Mumbai 2003 Transition at UBS in London 2003 'Of Memories, Dreams, Reverses', at Anant, New Delhi 2001 'Living Legends of Indian Contemporary Art', Tao Art Gallery, Mumbai 2001 'In Conversations', Gallery Espace, New Delhi 2001 Indian Art Circle, Habitat Centre, New Delhi 2001 Saffronart and Pundole Art Gallery, New York 1999 'Mahabharat', Gallery 7, Mumbai 1998 'The Probing Eye', an exhibition of Photographs, Surendra Paul Art Gallery, New Delhi 1998 'Drawings', Guild Art Gallery, Mumbai 1997 'Tryst with Destiny', Art from Modern India 1947-1997, Singapore Art Museum, organized by Centre for International Modern Art (CIMA), Kolkata 1997 'Six Modern Masters', Kumar Gallery, New Delhi 1996 Modern and Contemporary Indian Paintings, Sothebys Auction, London 1996 'A Tree in my Life', Village Gallery, New Delhi 1996 'The Moderns', Inaugural Exhibition, National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), Mumbai 1996 'The Mahabharata, The Card Player and The Scribe’, Kumar Gallery, New Delhi 1995 'Indian Contemporary Paintings', Christie's Auction, London 1995 'Bombay', presented by RPG Enterprises 1995 'River of Art', Inaugural Exhibition, Art Today 1994 'Indian Drawing Today', All India Fine Arts and Crafts Society (AIFACS), organized by Gallery Espace, New Delhi 1994 'The Solids', second Indian Drawing Biennale, exhibited as a special invitee 1993 'Reflections and Images', Vadhera and Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai 1992 'Masters of Indian Art', Hotel Intercontinental, Mumbai 1991 'Remembering Kali Pundole', Pundole Art Gallery, Mumbai 1991 Birla Academy of Art, Anniversary Exhibition , Kolkata 1991 'Addressing Gandhi', traveling exhibition by Sahmat 1989 'Timeless Art', Exhibition and Auction 1989 Sothebys in Mumbai 1989 'Artist's Alert', exhibition and auction by Sahmat, New Delhi 1984 Inaugural Exhibition, Gallery 7, Mumbai 1982 'Modern Indian Painters' Hirschhorn Museum, Washington D. C. 1982 'Contemporary Indian Art', Burlington House, London 1982 'Myth and Reality', Museum of Modern Art, Oxford, UK 1981 Inaugural Exhibition, Roopankar Museum, Bharat Bhavan, Bhopal 1981 'Indian Painting Today', Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai 1979 'Modern Asian Art', Fukuoka Art Museum, Japan 1976 'Pictorial Space', Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi 1976 'Indian Painting 1977', Chandigarh, organized by Black Partridge Gallery 1972 'Art Now', Kunika Chemould, New Delhi 1972 'One World through Art', Ben and Abbey Grey Foundation, St. Paul, MN, USA 1971 'Contemporary Indian Art', Renwick Gallery 1971 Smithsonian Institute, Washington D.C. 1970 'Art Now', Kunika Chemould, New Delhi 1969 'Contemporary Art, Dialogue between East and West', Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, Japan 1969 'Indian Painters 69', Max Mueller Bhavan & Birla Academy, Kolkata 1968 New Art Centre, London 1966 Lincoln Centre, New York 1965 'Ten Contemporary Artists from India' University of South Florida, Tampa; Jackson Art Museum, Jacksonville; Delgado Art Museum, New Orleans; Hunter Gallery, Chattanooga; Colorado Fine Art Center, Colorado Springs, Long Beach; Art Institute, San Francisco; East Wing Center, Honolulu 1965 'Ten Contemporary Painters from India' MIT, Cambridge; New Jersey State Museum, Trenton. 1964 'Six Artists in Black and White', Shridharani Gallery, New Delhi 1963 'Contemporary Painters from India', Gallery 63, New York 1963 'Eight Contemporary Artists from India', Lever House, New York 1959 'Artists of Fame and of Promise', Leicester Galleries, London 1959 'Trends in Contemporary Painting from India', Graham Gallery, New York 1959 'Modern Indian Art', Cairo 1959 'Contemporary Art from India', Essen, Dortmund, Zurich 1959 Inaugural Exhibition, Gallery 59, Mumbai 1956 'Eight Painters', Indian and Eastern Newspaper Society Building, New Delhi 1952-53 Progressive Artists at Madras College of Art, Chennai 1949 Progressive Artist Group, Chetna Restaurant, Mumbai 1949 Progressive Artist Group, Artists Aid Centre
Joint Exhibitions 1985 Ram Kumar and Krishen Khanna , Gallery 7, Mumbai 1954 With M F Husain at All India Fine Arts and Crafts society (AIFACS), New Delhi
Participations 2015 'Abby Grey and Indian Modernism: Selections from the NYU Art Collection', Grey Art Gallery, New York University, New York2014 'Ode to Monumental: Celebration, Visuality, Ideology', presented by Saffronart at Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi and Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai 2012 'Synergy 2012', 12th Anniversary Show, Tao Art Gallery, Mumbai2012 'Crossings: Time Unfolded, Part 2', Kiran Nadar Museum of Art (KNMA), New Delhi2011 'Ethos V: Indian Art Through the Lens of History (1900 to 1980), Indigo Blue Art, Singapore 2011 ‘Manifestations V', Delhi Art Gallery, New Delhi2011 'Roots in the Air, Branches Below: Modern & Contemporary Art from India', San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose 2011 'Time Unfolded', Kiran Nadar Museum of Art (KNMA), New Delhi2011 'Celebration 2011', Annual Exhibition, Kumar Art Gallery, New Delhi
2010 'Art Celebrates 2010: Sports and the City', represented by Art Alive Gallery at Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi to coincide with the hosting of the Commonwealth Games 2010 'Master’s Corner', organized by Indian Contemporary Art Journal at Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai; India International Art Fair, New Delhi2010 'Contemporary Printmaking In India', presented by Priyasri Art Gallery, Mumbai at Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai; Priyasri Art Gallery, Mumbai2010 'Evolve: 10th Anniversary Show', Tao Art Gallery, Mumbai2010 Annual Exhibition, Chawla Art Gallery, New Delhi 2008-09 'Paz Mandala', Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi 2008 'Harvest 2008', organized by Arushi Arts at The Stainless Gallery, New Delhi 1991 The Fifth Biennale, Havana Cuba 1988 First International Biennale, Lahore, Pakistan 1988 Festival of India, Japan 1987 Festival of India, USSR 1987 'Coups de Coeur', Geneva 1986 Baghdad International Festival of Art 1982 International Triennale, New Delhi 1976 25th Pugwash Conference, Chennai 1975 3rd Triennale of Contemporary World Art, New Delhi 1970 Expo '70, Indian Pavilion, Osaka, Japan 1968 International Triennale, New Delhi 1965 Annual Exhibition, Lalit Kala Akademi , New Delhi 1962 National Exhibition, Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi 1962 Venice Biennale, Indian Participation 1961 Tokyo Biennale 1960 Sao Paulo Biennale 1957 Tokyo Biennale 1946 Annual Exhibition, Punjab Art Society
Honours and Awards
2011 Padma Bhushan, Government of India 2004 Lalit Kala Ratna from...
2011 Padma Bhushan, Government of India 2004 Lalit Kala Ratna from The President of India 1997 Kala Ratna, All India Fine Arts & Crafts Society(AIFACS), New Delhi 1990 Padma Shri, Government of India 1989 Gold Medal, First International Biennale of Art, Lahore, Pakistan 1989 Sahitya Kala Parishad Award, New Delhi 1986 Presidents Award at Baghdad International Festival of Art 1965 Award, Lalit Kala Akademi Annual Exhibition, New Delhi 1965 Fellowship of the Council for Economic and Cultural Affairs, New York 1964 Artist–in-Residence, American University, Washington DC. 1962-63 Fellowship Rockefeller Council, New York 1962 Travel Fellowship by Council for Economic and Cultural Affairs, New York 1955 Commendation, Bombay Art Society Award, Mumbai 1955 Saurashtra Government Award for Oil Painting
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Even when he draws out Chaplinesque dualities and outlines pathos, painting for Krishen Khanna remains an experience of Annanda or complete bliss.
By Surendra Kumar Seth
What do you think have been the influences on you?
I don’t believe that there are any major influences on my work. On the other hand, I have met so many wonderful people and have been exposed to so much work by other artists. In fact, in...
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Even when he draws out Chaplinesque dualities and outlines pathos, painting for Krishen Khanna remains an experience of Annanda or complete bliss.
By Surendra Kumar Seth
What do you think have been the influences on you?
I don’t believe that there are any major influences on my work. On the other hand, I have met so many wonderful people and have been exposed to so much work by other artists. In fact, in my house you will hardly find any painting of mine. They are all works of other people. All these can influence you at one level.
In any discussion of your work the "Bandwallas" feature prominently. What made you choose the "Bandwallas" as your subject matter?
These are the most recent of my paintings so they are much talked about. What has drawn me to the bandwallas is the context they come from. They are a legacy of the Raj. The British left the bandwallas in India and now all baraats (wedding processions) look like parades. Everyone must fall in line. The bandwallas themselves wear glittering uniforms of a general and resemble the grandeur of the army except for their chappals. I see the bandwalla as a relic of the past appropriated by Punjabis and people in the North in general for their marriage processions and the like. On the one hand, we have uniforms which provide a kind of grandeur— as well as anonymity—to military personnel, while a different kind of uniform transforms the bandwalla into an amusing public entertainer. That is so peculiarly Indian. I have not only painted the bandwallas but also truckwalas( truck driver) because to me they seem very peculiarly Indian. I am moved by Chaplinesque situations that involve dual emotions. On the face of it, they can be very funny, even ridiculous. But there is a kind of pathos beneath it all.
What do you think is the reason for the sudden resurgence of Indian art?
Certain people think and propound that Indian art today, is better as vis-à-vis other countries and their art. But it is not so. Artists have been doing good and important work in India for a while. The only difference that has come in Indian art today is that auction houses like Christie’s and Sotheby’s have started auctioning Indian art and Indian art is selling. So the world has started relearning Indian art. There are now so many galleries selling Indian art. Art, by definition, is an individualistic exercise. How then, is it possible to group artists in a particular style? Does art have to have a message? Artists are individuals. And as a product of their times, which is why is it possible that there may be a common thread in their work. For an artist, work is not a means of recognition but a striving towards answers. An artist seeks to find the meaning of life. That is where art gets its depth from. Certain sensibilities that may be forms of one concept can be grouped together. Sometimes there are idealistic similarities, sometimes responses to social realities in that time are alike. In the latter part of the 20th century space became far more important than painting. The easel is a limited space. There was so much inbreeding of ideas because of restrictions of space. Such paintings divested themselves with the general flow of life. Now the edges have started smudging. The painter has to use creativity to create the subject and then send the message out. You have to create the concept of pictorial space or for that matter, a geometrical two-dimensional space. I have begun to use the easel less and less now and I have moved to murals where the restriction of space is less. A painting has edges and an artist has to work within those restrictions. I would like to move out of the edges.
What does it mean to you to paint?
Art for me, is the ultimate Annanda (bliss). Art can provide you with the metaphysical answers you have been looking for even whilst you are involved in its creation. They call it drawing. I really have no name for it. It's a compulsion, an itch. The more I scratch, the more I want to continue. It is enjoyable but it can also hurt when nothing emerges but an incomprehensible mess. Was I taught to draw? Silly question really. How can one manipulate a compulsive itch? Try and stop it and see what happens. Bad temper, depression and a sickness of spirit. Emptiness. It follows that my subject matter is of importance to me and is not fortuitous. Dependent on this choice are the means that will reveal it. Nor is it ever certain that every venture will be successful. What is certain, and this gives me some comfort, is that a moment of my life was spent in such absorption that bypassed Time. If at the end of it, what I make I made finds acceptance with someone, it confirms to me that I'm not alone. The drawing becomes a ground for sharing an experience.
What is your process like? Is there any change in your style from earlier to now?
My gaze is independent of my pencil holding hand. I think I could shut my eyes without ceasing to scribble. Sustained scribbling achieves only a small inroad that may dislodge an image. Sounds dramatic doesn't it? It isn't always so. I could not repeat the contours of a subject I've tackled before, which is not to say that I would not go back to the same subject in the hope of discovering another dimension. I used to do abstracts earlier and I have now moved on to human forms. I thought that the person or the individual is being neglected – the person in a particular situation who is influenced by the conditions around. I want to now emphasise the human beings caught up in their particular condition.
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Bethesda
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