Born in Kerala on 15 February 1924, K G Subramanyan was among the leading artists who sought to explore a post-Independence Indian identity through art. He completed his Bachelor’s degree in Economics from the Presidency College in Chennai before pursuing his interest in art to Santiniketan in 1944, where he studied under the tutelage of Benode Behari Mukherjee, Nandalal Bose and Ramkinkar Baij for four years. In 1955, Subramanyan was awarded a...
Born in Kerala on 15 February 1924, K G Subramanyan was among the leading artists who sought to explore a post-Independence Indian identity through art. He completed his Bachelor’s degree in Economics from the Presidency College in Chennai before pursuing his interest in art to Santiniketan in 1944, where he studied under the tutelage of Benode Behari Mukherjee, Nandalal Bose and Ramkinkar Baij for four years. In 1955, Subramanyan was awarded a British Council Research Fellowship to study at the Slade School of Art, University of London.
A writer, scholar, teacher and art historian, K G Subramanyan was also prolific in his art, employing a range of mediums and styles. His belief in the revival of Indian traditions led him to create a new artistic idiom, and his practice incorporated drawing, oil painting, watercolour, murals and sculpture alongside toy making, set design, glass painting, pottery and weaving. His dedication to his art transformed Indian modernism and made it more diverse.
Subramanyan’s career began in earnest in the 1950s, and his early training in Santiniketan was evident. “[His early works] trace his transition from an impressionable student, influenced by two dissimilar mentors - Ramkinkar [Baij] and Benode Behari [Mukherjee] - to a young artist putting together the rudimentary framework of a visual language and vision of his own.” (R Siva Kumar, Self Portraits and Other Early Drawings, Kolkata: Seagull Foundation for the Arts, 2020)
In 1966, Subramanyan was awarded a J D Rockefeller III Fund Fellowship, which entailed a year-long stay in New York. It was during this period that his ongoing interest in semi-abstraction further evolved, reviving traditional techniques by infusing them with a unique plasticity that contemporised them and increased their reach.
From the 1980s onwards, Subramanyan’s expanded artistic vocabulary grew to incorporate elements from a popular bazaar tradition of glass painting. According to R Siva Kumar, “Subramanyan’s late works were provoking and celebratory, teasing and subversive, humane and irreverent at once. Done with scintillating spontaneity, they were not merely expressive and complex like most things he had done in the past but were also some of his most vibrant paintings. This came partly from his deep engagement with the world and partly from the way he moved from one level of communication, or expression, to another through calculated inflections of his visual idiom. ”
The artist's interest in writing elevated his work, which became an exemplar of what the combination of language and art can achieve. “Subramanyan’s understanding of art as a kind of linguistic system allows him to envision a living tradition in which artists constantly renew traditional as well as modern forms by not only accepting the eclectic nature of the ‘modern’ world but also by maintaining contact with the world.” (Margaret Richardson, “Conclusion: An Artist of Modern Life,” The Aesthetic Vision of K G Subramanyan, Kolkata: Seagull Books, 2013, p. 157)
In a career spanning nearly seven decades, K G Subramanyan’s work has been exhibited in over fifty solo shows, including an extensive 2015-2016 exhibition by Kolkata's Seagull Foundation for the Arts in collaboration with the Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai, and the Harrington Street Arts Centre, Kolkata.
Subramanyan was also an inspiration to generations of students as a member of the Fine Arts Faculty at M S University in Vadodara. He passed away in Vadodara on 29 June 2016 at the age of 92.
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Lot
26
of
120
CREATIVE CIRCUIT: THE ART OF K G SUBRAMANYAN
19-20 JANUARY 2021
Estimate
Rs 6,00,000 - 8,00,000
$8,335 - 11,115
ARTWORK DETAILS
K G Subramanyan
a) Untitled 1964-66 Marker pen on paper 12 x 18 in (30.4 x 45.7 cm)
b) Untitled 1964-66 Marker pen on paper 12 x 18 in (30.4 x 45.7 cm)
(Set of two)
PROVENANCE Estate of K. G. Subramanyan managed by The Seagull Foundation for the Arts
EXHIBITEDThe Ambivalent Gesture , Santiniketan: Nandan Gallery, Kala Bhavana, 5 - 19 February 2018; Patna: Bihar Museum, 29 September - 16 October 2019IMPACT: design thinking and the visual arts in young India , Mumbai: Chatterjee & Lal, 6 September - 20 October 2018 PUBLISHEDThe Ambivalent Gesture , Kolkata: Seagull Foundation for the Arts, 2019
Category: Painting
Style: Figurative