Thursday, April 27, 2023
Meera Mukherjee: The First Woman Sculptor / Ved Prakash Bhardwaj
“I belonged to a country which also had a great tradition of its own. It was the heritage which had in a thousand ways folded me. And, so though I was at the moment living, learning and growing in the West, I should still find my own way to myself, rooted in the great Indian tradition.” - Meera Mukherjee
One of the most well-known artists associated with bringing modernity to Indian sculpture is Meera Mukherjee. She was able to combine Dhokra metal casting with contemporary sculpting to offer metal casting a new direction as a result of the growth of her technical metal-casting talents. 2023 is the birth anniversary year of Meera Mukherjee. At a time when there were very few women painters in Indian modern art, Meera demonstrated that women may be just as skilled as men by working in a trade that was thought to be exclusively for men. She has featured musicians, the general public, and women in particular in her many sculptures. She was the primary creator of the sculpture to uses human figures and abstraction. From April 27, Akar Prakar Gallery Delhi will host an exhibition of him in honor of the 100th anniversary of her birth. The exhibition includes her bronze sculptures as well as works in terracotta, wood, marble and ceramics, as well as many of her drawings on paper. Meera Mukherjee is identified as a sculptor but she also did paintings, especially she did a lot of work on paper. In sculpture too, she worked in many mediums.
Meera Mukherjee not only carved a niche for herself in metal sculpture but also worked with tribal artists as an activist at that time. She broke the notion that painting was the only art form for women. At that time peoples think that sculpture is a masculine art that is not possible for women to do. This is a major reason why crafting involves the need for greater physical strength as well as skill in operating various tools and assistants which is not possible for women. Meera Mukherjee changed it completely. In Delhi, when she took craft as a subject while studying arts at Delhi Polytechnic, students and teachers also said that she would not be able to do crafts. Painting can be done alone but in crafts, especially in metal, the artist takes the help of other assistants, who are mainly men, from taking the modeling to finishing. Getting them to work will be a difficult task for the women.
Mira Mukherjee joined the Indian Society of Oriental Art School, founded by Abnichandranath Tagore, at the age of 14. She wanted to move forward in the field of art but the family got him married. The responsibilities of the family after marriage put the artist in him on the back burner for some time. The life of monotony did not suit her and she was soon divorced. After that, she came to Delhi and joined the art department of Delhi Polytechnic for further study. In those days Art College was a department of the Polytechnic. There she started with painting but in the second semester, she start sculpture study. In 1947 she received a diploma in drawing, graphics, and sculpture.
She then received an Indo-German Fellowship at the Akademie der Billenden Kunst (Academy of Fine Arts) in Munich, which contributed significantly to the furthering of his art practice. Contacting other sculptors abroad, as well as seeing the world's great sculptures, and learning the Western methodology of metal sculpture, she get a lot of knowledge in sculpting. careers came in handy, although her destination was something else. The company of tribal artists of Bastar gave dimension to her craft, which became her identity. Not only this, but she also worked to establish a new relationship between the treble artists and modern artists. It is a different matter that Meera Mukherjee's work of bridging the gap between the two arts did not get the support of other artists. The modern artists who used the work of the tribal in their crafts never helped the tribal artists to establish themselves independently. This is the reason that even today the Dhokra sculptures have not been freed from the realm of folk and tribal art, for which Meera Mukherjee had tried.
What is interesting about Meera Mukherjee's artistic expression is that she did not limit herself to just one art form, she adopted painting and graphics as well as writing and education to explore her artistic quest. In the beginning, she did work in the field of child education, and later she worked in Bastar with tribe artists as well as an activist in Bihar, Rajasthan, etc. States to empower tribe artists. she regularly wrote diaries that reflected her art process and education, as well as her curiosity about art.
Her immense love for craftsmanship inspired him to study this art in particular and Western art also gave him a new vision but she soon caught that she should give priority to self-styled strategies. From the director, she started the search for Indianness in her art, which reaches the social and cultural consciousness of diverse art through the creation of Dhokra sculptures. Its main inspiration was Tony Stadler, her mentor in Munich, who told Meera to search their artistic roots in Indian traditional art rather than Europe art. However, it was not easy because at that time most of the Indian artists, who were associated with European countries on scholarship or the other, were too much influenced by Western art.
She returned to India from Munich in 1957 and started working as an art teacher at Schools. She also started studying traditional Indian sculpture art. She went to the Bastar region of Madhya Pradesh where she was introduced to the Gharuan and Maran tribesmen and their Dhokra metal casting technique. Dhokra is also called Lost Wax Technique. Meera Mukherjee incorporated it into her metal sculpture, and try to teach modern sculptures to tribes. Later she created such centers in designated areas which were helpful in the development of tribal art. Meera Mukherjee is credited with having changed the technique of metal craft supervision in Bengal, as well as at the same time using inscriptions in the main crafts. Along with this, she also gave birth to the idea of establishing a group of crafts as an artist, breaking the concept of a single figure. There are also a large number of single figures among her sculptures, but in many sculptures, she has used more than one figure as complementary to each other. Its inspiration will be the realization of a collective socialite in tribal life.
Meera Mukherjee's sculptures are based on the common man engaged in everyday activities and chores. Her subjects include fishermen, weavers, women engaged in sewing, and laborers. Nature, music, and dance have been some of her other themes. She created a lot of sculptures to depict women's life and their strength. Due to the Dhokra rapture, her crafts acquire a monumental quality even though they are not very large.
Meera Mukherjee had her first show in 1960. She received positive recognition for her works and was awarded the President's Award for Master Craftsmen in Metalwork. She initially began her search tour in Madhya Pradesh, soon receiving a two-year fellowship from the Anthropological Survey of India to aid her search. She is also credited with directing the craft traditions of metal workers in central India. From 1961 to 1964, she worked as a Senior Research Fellowship at ASI and continued the survey on metal workers throughout India and Nepal. She made a special study of the craft of various communities in the states of Madhya Pradesh along with some Eastern and Southern states. During that period she came in contact with promoters of 'living traditions' such as Prabha Sen and Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay, who helped him understand folk and classical arts. Her countrywide research was published in 1978 as part of the Anthropological Survey of Metal Craftsmen of India.
She received the Padma Shri award in 1992. Apart from this, she received many honors including the Abnindra Award of West Bengal. Her major books are Folk metal craft in India (1978), Metal Craft in India (1978), and Metal Craftsmen in India (1979).
मीरा मुखर्जीः पहली महिला स्कल्पटर Meera Mukharjee: The first woman sculpture/ वेद प्रकाश भारद्वाज
भारतीय शिल्प कला में आधुनिकता का नवोन्मेष करने का श्रेय जिन कलाकारों को जाता है उनमें मीरा मुखर्जी का नाम अग्रणी है। मेटल कास्टिंग में तकनीकी कौशल के विकास के साथ ही ढोकरा कास्टिंग को आधुनिक शिल्पकला के साथ मिलाकर उन्होंने मेटल कास्टिंग को एक नई दिशा दिखाई थी। 1923 में जन्मी मीरा मुखर्जी का यह जन्म शताब्दी वर्ष है। उस समय जब गिनती की महिला कलाकार थीं, मीरा ने सिर्फ पुरुषों का क्षेत्र माने जाने वाली शिल्पकला में काम करके यह साबित किया था कि स्त्रियां पुरुषों से किसी मामले में कम नहीं हैं। अपने शिल्पों में संगीतकारों, सामान्य व्यक्तियों और विशेषरूप से महिलाओं को उन्होंने अलग अलग स्थितियों में दिखाया। शिल्प में कल्पना और अमूर्तन की शुरुआत करने वाली वह प्रमुख कलाकार थीं। उनके जन्म शताब्दी वर्ष में आकार प्रकार गैलरी दिल्ली द्वारा उनकी एक प्रदर्शनी 27 अप्रैल से आयोजित की गई है। इस प्रदर्शनी में उनके ब्रांज शिल्पों के साथ ही टेराकोटा, वुड, मार्बल और सेरेमिक के काम शामिल हैं, साथ ही कागज पर उनके कई चित्र भी प्रदर्शित किये गये हैं। मीरा मुखर्जी की पहचान एक स्कल्पटर के रुप में है पर उन्होंने पेंटिंग भी की हैं, विशेषरुप से उन्होंने कागज पर काफी काम किये थे। शिल्प में भी उन्होंने अनेक माध्यमों में काम किया था।
मीरा मुखर्जी में न केवल पुरुषों के प्रभुत्व वाली शिल्पकला में अपनी जगह बनाई अपितु उन्होंने उस समय एक एक्टिविस्ट के रूप में आदिवासी कलाकारों के साथ काम भी किया। उन्होंने इस धारणा को तोड़ दिया था कि स्त्रियों के लिए पेंटिंग ही एकमात्र कला विधा है। शिल्पकला एक मर्दाना कला है जिसे कर पाना स्त्रियों के लिए संभव नहीं है। इसका एक बड़ा कारण शिल्प रचना में अधिक शारीरिक बल की आवश्यकता के साथ ही विभिन्न उपकरणों को चलाने का कौशल भी शामिल है जो स्त्रियों के लिए संभव नहीं है। मीरा मुखर्जी ने इसे पूरी तरह बदल कर रख दिया। दिल्ली में जब उन्होंने पॉलिटेक्निक में कला अध्ययन के दौरान शिल्प को भी एक विषय के रूप में लिया तो साथी विद्यार्थियों और शिक्षकों ने कहा भी कि वह शिल्प नहीं कर पाएंगीं। पेंटिंग अकेला व्यक्ति कर सकता है पर शिल्प में, विशेषरूप से मेटल में कलाकार को मॉडलिंग से लेकर कास्टिंग व फिनिशिंग तक में दूसरे सहायकों का सहयोग लेना पड़ता है जो मुख्यरूप से पुरुष ही होते हैं। उनसे काम लेना एक स्त्री के लिए मुश्किल होगा।
मीरा मुखर्जी 14 साल की उम्र में अबनींद्रनाथ टैगोर द्वारा स्थापित इंडियन सोसाइटी ऑफ ओरिएंटल आर्ट स्कूल में प्रवेश लिया था। वह कला के क्षेत्र में आगे बढ़ना चाहती थीं पर परिवार ने उनका विवाह कर दिया। विवाह के बाद परिवार की जिम्मेदारी ने उनके अंदर के कलाकार को कुछ समय के लिए पीछे धकेल दिया। पर वैवाहिक जीवन उन्हें रास नहीं आया और जल्दी ही उनका तलाक हो गया। उसके बाद वह दिल्ली आ गईं और दिल्ली पॉलिटेक्निक के कला विभाग में प्रवेश लिया। उन दिनों आर्ट कॉलेज पॉलिटेक्निक का ही एक विभाग था। वहां उन्होंने पेंटिंग से शुरुआत की पर पहले सेमेस्टर के बाद ही शिल्प का अध्ययन करने लगीं। 1947 में उन्होंने वहां से पेंटिंग्स, ग्राफिक्स और मूर्तिकला में डिप्लोमा प्राप्त किया।
वह खुद को दिल्ली पॉलिटेक्निक में दाखिला लेने के लिए चली गईं, जहाँ से उन्होंने वर्ष 1947 में पेंटिंग, ग्राफिक्स और मूर्तिकला में डिप्लोमा प्राप्त किया।
इसके बाद उन्हें म्यूनिख में अकादेमी डेर बिल्डेंडेन कुन्स्ट (एकेडमी ऑफ फाइन आर्ट्स) में इंडो-जर्मन फैलोशिप मिली जिसने उनकी कला साधना को आगे बढ़ाने में महत्वपूर्ण योगदान दिया। विदेश में दूसरे शिल्प कलाकारों से सम्पर्क के साथ ही विश्व की महान शिल्प कलाकृतियों को देखना, और मेटल स्कल्पचर कास्टिंग की पश्चिमी पद्धति को सीखना उनके लिए बड़ा काम आया, हालांकि उनकी मंजिल कुछ और ही थी। बस्तर के आदिवासी कलाकारों के सानिध्य ने उनकी शिल्प कला को वह आयाम दिया जो उनकी पहचान बन गया। यही नहीं, उन्होंने पारम्परिक आदिवासी शिल्पकला और आधुनिक शिल्पकला के बीच की दूरी को मिटाते हुए दोनों में एक नया रिश्ता स्थापित करने का काम भी किया। यह अलग बात है कि मीरा मुखर्जी के दोनों कलाओं के बीच की दूरी को मिटाने के काम को दूसरे कलाकारों का सहयोग नहीं मिला। आदिवासियों की छवियों को अपने शिल्पों में इस्तेमाल करने वाले आधुनिक कलाकारों ने कभी आदिवासी कलाकारों को स्वतंत्र रूप से स्थापित होने में कोई मदद नहीं की। यही कारण है कि आज भी डोकरा कास्टिंग को लोक एवं आदिवासी कला के दायरे से मुक्ति नहीं मिल पाई है जिसके लिए मीरा मुखर्जी ने प्रयास किया था।
मीरा मुखर्जी की कलात्मक अभिव्यक्ति के बारे में दिलचस्प बात यह है कि उन्होंने खुद को केवल एक कला रूप तक सीमित नहीं रखा और पेंटिंग व ग्राफिक्स के साथ ही लेखन और शिक्षा को भी उन्होंने अपनी कला में शामिल किया। उन्होंने शुरुआत में बच्चों को पढ़ाने का काम किया पर बाद में बस्तर के साथ ही बिहार, राजस्थान आदि प्रदेशों के आदिवासी कलाकारों के बीच रहकर भी काम किया। वह नियमित रूप से डायरी लिखती थीं जिनमें उनकी कला प्रक्रिया व अनुभवों के साथ ही कला को लेकर उनकी जिज्ञासाएं और उनके सम्भावित जवाब भी होते थे।
शिल्प कला के प्रति अपने अत्यधिक प्रेम ने उन्हें इस कला के विशेष अध्ययन के लिए प्रेरित किया और पश्चिमी कला ने उन्हें एक नई दृष्टि भी दी पर जल्दी ही उन्हें लगने लगा कि उन्हें स्वअर्जित अनुभवों को प्राथमिकता देनी चाहिए। यहीं से उन्होंने अपनी कला में भारतीयता की खोज शुरू की जो डोकरा कास्टिंग से होते हुए आदिवासी शिल्प कला के सामाजिक व सांस्कृतिक स्रोतों तक पहुंचती है। इसकी मुख्य प्रेरणा उन्हें म्युनिख में उनके मार्गदर्शक रहे टोनी स्टैडलर रहे जिन्होंने मीरा मुखर्जी को अपनी कला की खोज यूरोप की बजाय अपने देश की स्थानीय परम्पराओं में खोजने के लिए कहा था। हालांकि यह आसान नहीं था क्योंकि उस समय ज्यादातर भारतीय कलाकार, जो यूरोपीय देशों में स्कॉलरशिप या दूसरे साधनों से गए, वह वहां की कला से इतने अधिक प्रभावित हुए कि उससे मुक्त नहीं हो सके।
1957 में वह म्युनिख से भारत लौटीं। उसके बाद उन्होंने बंगाल के कुर्सेओंग में डाउहिल स्कूल में, और 1960 में प्रैट मेमोरियल स्कूल में कोलकाता में कला शिक्षिका के रूप में काम किया। उन्हीं दिनों उन्होंने पारम्परिक भारतीय मूर्तिशिल्प कला का अध्ययन शुरू किया। उन्हीं दिनों वह मध्यप्रदेश के बस्तर क्षेत्र में गईं जहां उनका परिचय घरुआं और मारालों आदिवासियों से और उनकी ढोकरा कास्टिंग तकनीक से हुआ। ढोकरा कास्टिंग को लॉस्ट वैक्स तकनीक कहा जाता है।
मीरा मुखर्जी ने ढोकरा कास्टिंग की तकनीक को सीखते हुए उसे अपने मेटल स्कल्पचर में शामिल किया। उन्होंने बाद में आदिवासी क्षेत्रों में ऐसे सेंटर बनाए जो आदिवासी कला के विकास में सहायक रहे। मीरा मुखर्जी को इस बात का श्रेय जाता है कि उन्होंने बंगाल की मेटल शिल्प कास्टिंग की तकनीक में बदलाव किए, साथ ही उस समय आकृति प्रधान शिल्पों में भी अमूर्तन का प्रयोग किया। इसके साथ ही उन्होंने एकल शिल्प की अवधारणा को भी तोड़ते हुए शिल्पों के समूह को एक कलाकृति के रूप में स्थापित करने के विचार को भी जन्म दिया। उनके शिल्पों में एकल आकॄतियाँ भी हैं पर बड़ी संख्या में ऐसे शिल्प भी हैं जिनमें अनेक आकॄतियाँ एक-दूसरे की पूरक के रूप में प्रयोग की गई हैं। इसकी प्रेरणा निश्चित ही आदिवासी जीवन में सामूहिक सामाजिकता बोध रहा होगा।
मीरा मुखर्जी की मूर्तियां दिन-प्रतिदिन की गतिविधियों और कामों में लगे आम आदमी पर आधारित हैं। उनके विषयों में शामिल हैं, मछुआरे, बुनकर, सिलाई में लगी महिलाएं, मजदूर। प्रकृति, संगीत, नृत्य उनके कुछ दूसरे विषय रहे। स्त्री को केंद्र में रखकर उन्होंने अनेक काम किए। ढोकरा कास्टिंग की वजह से आकार में बहुत बड़े न होने के बाद भी उनके शिल्पों में मॉन्युमेंटल क्वालिटी मिलती है।
मीरा मुखर्जी ने 1960 में अपना पहला शो शुरू किया। उन्हें अपने कार्यों के लिए सकारात्मक पहचान मिली और उन्हें मेटलवर्क में मास्टर क्राफ्ट्समैन के राष्ट्रपति पुरस्कार से सम्मानित किया गया। उन्होंने शुरू में मध्य प्रदेश में अपने शोध दौरे शुरू किए, जल्द ही उन्हें अपने शोध में सहायता के लिए एंथ्रोपोलॉजिकल सर्वे ऑफ इंडिया से दो साल का वजीफा मिला।
उन्हें मध्य भारत में धातु-कारीगरों की शिल्प प्रथाओं का दस्तवेजीकरण का श्रेय भी है। 1961 से 1964 तक, उन्होंने एएसआई में सीनियर रिसर्च फेलोशिप के रूप में काम किया और पूरे भारत और नेपाल में धातु-कारीगरों पर सर्वेक्षण करना जारी रखा। मध्य प्रदेश, पूर्व और दक्षिण के राज्यों के आदिवासी समाजों की शिल्पकला का उन्होंने विशेष अध्ययन किया। इसी दौरान वह प्रबाश सेन और कमलादेवी चट्टोपाध्याय जैसी 'जीवित परंपराओं' के प्रवर्तकों के निकट आईं जिससे उन्हें लोक व आदिवासी कलाओं को समझने में सहायता मिली। उनके देश भर में किए गए इस शोध का 1978 में भारत के धातु शिल्पकारों में मानव विज्ञान सर्वेक्षण के अंतर्गत प्रकाशित किया गया।
उन्हें 1992 में पद्मश्री सम्मान प्राप्त हुआ। इसके अलावा पश्चिम बंगाल के अबनींद्र पुरस्कार सहित अनेक सम्मान उन्हें मिले। भारत में लोक धातु शिल्प (1978), भारत में धातु शिल्प (1978) और भारत में धातु शिल्पकार (1979) उनकी प्रमुख पुस्तकें हैं।
Friday, April 21, 2023
SK Sahni: 50 years of journey with lines
SK Sahni: 50 years of journey with lines
Ved Prakash Bhardwaj
It is easy to draw a straight line but very difficult to maintain its character in a group especially when they become part of a structure. Line and structure have different characters and many times they are contradictory to each other; but when a balanced hand and mind with full of thoughts direct the lines, they become an elegant expression. S.K. Sahni is an artist of our time who has proved it again and again over the last 50 years. How is it possible for him? I think it has a relation with his soul which is very simple, straight, and soft, like his lines. He plays with lines like a magician and each time a simple line appears with a new shine in a different context. A single line can also be art, but its meaning is not clear, but when many lines together give birth to a shape, then its meaning becomes more clear. Society is not made of a single person but of a group of persons, similarly, the artwork is made of many lines and shapes meet. SK Sahni's art lines have a social life. Many lines run parallel in different directions and sometimes cross each other to form a web. It is a symbiosis of lines that gives rise to a form that is abstract but also very familiar.
Sahni started his artistic quest in figures with abstraction in the 60s. He focused on human conditions without a narrative attitude. Some of his paintings of that time have clear figures but most of them have abstract connotations. He did a lot of lino-cut prints. Later he did digital abstract graphics. When he did watercolor landscapes, again he moved from a realistic to an abstract approach. We can easily find that he thinks and transforms each thing in abstraction. He loves drawings and geometrical forms since the beginning, and till 70’s he did experiments in different mediums and forms. Since the 1980’s he has concentrated his total focus on lines and geometrical forms. Sometimes his forms look like architectural forms but you can’t generalize them, because he always focuses on space and not on structure.
He starts by drawing a line in unbounded space and slowly the space transforms into a stage where lines are dancing and making different shapes, reflecting the development of human society. Human beings have always wished to bind time and space which is impossible till today, but an artist can do it symbolically in his creation, and it is an unending process. An artwork has a starting point but doesn’t have an ending point; an ending means there is nothing left for us to do. Sahni’s paintings are a perfect combination of painting and drawing which have unending lines, reflecting endless hope and life. He moves lines in different directions, sometime collator and sometimes they cross each other and leave some spaces blank to create a concrete image. It is difficult to identify any starting or ending point in his lines. That is why line-based art becomes an endless journey for him.
Lines in the art are not a new thing in India. In our folk and tribal art, it has a long practice to create images with lines. It is inherent in life, so they do not need any technical definition for that, but the West always needs that, and due to our educational system, we follow the West. People relate Sahni’s art to Kinetic or OP art which comes from the West. Kinetic or OP art is a technic which can help to build an image with lines and create fusion. But Sahni’s art is not a technical quest, it is more than that.
In the West, most OP artists use the total surface as a positive space and very few try to balance between positive and negative space. Optical Illusion is the main target for Western artists and that practice continues. But Sahni follows the Indian ideology that emphasizes the balancing of negative and positive aspects in life. He creates space within space, negative space between positive spaces and which becomes his specialty. Sahni creates an illusion of negative and positive space many times in his works. In his earlier paintings, the total space is full of movements, but in recent years, I want to underline a major change in his works and that is the balance of movement and steadiness of space. As young people, we are all enthusiastic to give a movement to live, we try to fill life full of emotions, relations, creation, and whatever we can do, but with maturity and experience, we understand the importance of a blank space in life. The blank space, whether it will be narrow or broad, without any movement gives us relaxation; we find a space that is only for us. We try to save some little time from social life for us or we can say that we always try to shield a narrow corner in the crowd, like an inner space within outer space. I think that is the reason Sahni uses a different composition from his earlier paintings.
He uses different tones of colors and textures in some parts of his paintings which gives a different feeling to viewers, evokes moods and emotions and lines give them direction. He says “A straight line is pure, unsentimental, and unconditional of any subjective feelings. However, when placed in conjunction with other lines, it may evoke different emotions and moods.”
Previously, he used direct lines on the canvas, but today he has developed a different technique. He uses masking tape of different thicknesses to create different lines, and also some tools to create lines. For that first, he paints and then draws lines with his tools and gets lines that look like dancing. He plays with lines and shapes in space and captures their spontaneous movements of them, but sometimes he directs the lines intellectually and arrange them with shapes. Even, sometimes he cuts a finished work into equal pieces and then arranged and reassembled it in a different order to discover new images. He created a series ‘reflections’ through that process.
He knows and accepts that his images are not pre-conceived, so he always looked at each pattern and line as a different identity, identity of moods, and emotions which are changing from time to time with the situation. Each line or group of lines and shapes is a reflection of human conditions in a particular situation. Lines come close to each other and go away from each other, horizontal and vertical lines, all reflections of physiological and psychological human conditions.
I am seeing his paintings for the last ten years. The simplicity of his personality, which reflects in his art captivates me. He is very clear in his thoughts and art, and very noble to hear others on his art, as well as accepting others' creations. This nobility makes him a great person and artist.
Artist’s statement
The shortest distance between two points is a straight line that does not exist in nature and is a creative concept of man. It has no emotive quality of its own but is capable of evoking unique experiences.
Thus a straight line is pure, unsentimental, and unconditional of any subjective feelings. However, when placed in conjunction with other lines, it may evoke different emotions and moods.
For my creative expression, I search images in space with straight lines. In some works, the line is replaced by the masking tape of different thicknesses. The image is allowed to develop & establish its own identity. Pains taxingly – line by line – the image is being built gradually. It passes through various stages by adding color and is allowed to take its shape. And finally, the image is revealed.
I do not know from where it has come. It is compulsive activity, partially spontaneous & partially intellectual. The image is free from any preconceived thoughts, notions, and ideas. It is beyond recognition in terms of manmade or nature-made objects or realities and tensions of life. Thus it is free from any such bondage.
Labels:
abstract art,
Delhi art,
Indian art,
modern art,
S.K. Sahni
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