Page 1
Company Painting
A
rt in India had a different purpose prior to the coming of
the British. It could be seen as statues on temple walls,
miniature paintings that often illustrated manuscripts,
decoration on the walls of mud houses in villages, among
many other examples. With the colonial rule around the
eighteenth century, the English were charmed by different
manners and customs of people of all ranks, tropical flora
and fauna, and varying locales. Partly for documentation
and partly for artistic reasons, many English officers
commissioned local artists to paint scenes around them to
get a better idea of the natives. The paintings were largely
made on paper by local artists, some of whom had migrated
from erstwhile courts of Murshidabad, Lucknow or Delhi. To
please their new patrons, they had to adapt their traditional
way of painting to document
the world around them. This
meant that they had to rely
more on close observation,
a striking feature of the
European art, rather than
memory and rule books, as
seen in traditional art. It is
this mixture of traditional and
European style of painting
that came to be known as the
Company School of Painting.
This style was not only popular
among the British in India but
even in Britain, where albums,
consisting a set of paintings
were much in demand.
6
The Bengal School and Cultural
Nationalism
Ghulam Ali Khan,
Group of Courtesans,
Company Painting, 1800–1825.
San Diego Museum of Art,
California, USA
1_6.Bengali Painting.indd 85 01 Sep 2020 03:54:46 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
Page 2
Company Painting
A
rt in India had a different purpose prior to the coming of
the British. It could be seen as statues on temple walls,
miniature paintings that often illustrated manuscripts,
decoration on the walls of mud houses in villages, among
many other examples. With the colonial rule around the
eighteenth century, the English were charmed by different
manners and customs of people of all ranks, tropical flora
and fauna, and varying locales. Partly for documentation
and partly for artistic reasons, many English officers
commissioned local artists to paint scenes around them to
get a better idea of the natives. The paintings were largely
made on paper by local artists, some of whom had migrated
from erstwhile courts of Murshidabad, Lucknow or Delhi. To
please their new patrons, they had to adapt their traditional
way of painting to document
the world around them. This
meant that they had to rely
more on close observation,
a striking feature of the
European art, rather than
memory and rule books, as
seen in traditional art. It is
this mixture of traditional and
European style of painting
that came to be known as the
Company School of Painting.
This style was not only popular
among the British in India but
even in Britain, where albums,
consisting a set of paintings
were much in demand.
6
The Bengal School and Cultural
Nationalism
Ghulam Ali Khan,
Group of Courtesans,
Company Painting, 1800–1825.
San Diego Museum of Art,
California, USA
1_6.Bengali Painting.indd 85 01 Sep 2020 03:54:46 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
86 An IntroductIon to IndIAn Art —PArt II
Raja Ravi Varma
This style declined with the entry of photography
in India in the mid–nineteenth century as camera
offered a better way of documentation. What,
However, flourished in the art schools set up by
the British was the academic style of oil painting
that used a European medium to depict Indian
subject matter. The most successful examples
of this type of painting were found away from
these art schools. They are best seen in the
works produced by self-taught artist, Raja Ravi
Varma of the Travancore Court in Kerala. By
imitating copies of European paintings popular
in Indian palaces, he mastered the style of
academic realism and used it to depict scenes
from popular epics like the Ramayana and
Mahabharata. They became so popular that
many of his paintings were copied as oleographs
and were sold in market. They even entered people’s homes as
calendar images. With the rise of nationalism in India by the
end of the nineteenth century, this academic style embraced
by Raja Ravi Varma came to be looked down upon as foreign
and too western to show Indian myths and history. It is
amidst such nationalist thinking that the Bengal School of Art
emerged in the first decade of the twentieth century.
The Bengal School
The term ‘Bengal School of Art’ is not fully accurate. It is true
that the first move to create a modern, nationalist school
happened in Bengal but it was not restricted to this region
alone. It was an art movement and a style of painting that
originated in Calcutta, the centre of British power, but later
influenced many artists in different parts of the country,
including Shantiniketan, where India’s first national art
school was founded. It was associated with the nationalist
movement (Swadeshi) and spearheaded by Abanindranath
Tagore (1871–1951). Abanindranath enjoyed the support of
British administrator and principal of the Calcutta School
of Art, E. B. Havell (1861–1934). Both Abanindranath and
Havell were critical of colonial Art Schools and the manner in
which European taste in art was being imposed on Indians.
They firmly believed in creating a new type of painting that
Raja Ravi Varma,
Krishna as envoy,
1906. NGMA, New Delhi, India
1_6.Bengali Painting.indd 86 14-12-2021 15:23:41
Rationalised 2023-24
Page 3
Company Painting
A
rt in India had a different purpose prior to the coming of
the British. It could be seen as statues on temple walls,
miniature paintings that often illustrated manuscripts,
decoration on the walls of mud houses in villages, among
many other examples. With the colonial rule around the
eighteenth century, the English were charmed by different
manners and customs of people of all ranks, tropical flora
and fauna, and varying locales. Partly for documentation
and partly for artistic reasons, many English officers
commissioned local artists to paint scenes around them to
get a better idea of the natives. The paintings were largely
made on paper by local artists, some of whom had migrated
from erstwhile courts of Murshidabad, Lucknow or Delhi. To
please their new patrons, they had to adapt their traditional
way of painting to document
the world around them. This
meant that they had to rely
more on close observation,
a striking feature of the
European art, rather than
memory and rule books, as
seen in traditional art. It is
this mixture of traditional and
European style of painting
that came to be known as the
Company School of Painting.
This style was not only popular
among the British in India but
even in Britain, where albums,
consisting a set of paintings
were much in demand.
6
The Bengal School and Cultural
Nationalism
Ghulam Ali Khan,
Group of Courtesans,
Company Painting, 1800–1825.
San Diego Museum of Art,
California, USA
1_6.Bengali Painting.indd 85 01 Sep 2020 03:54:46 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
86 An IntroductIon to IndIAn Art —PArt II
Raja Ravi Varma
This style declined with the entry of photography
in India in the mid–nineteenth century as camera
offered a better way of documentation. What,
However, flourished in the art schools set up by
the British was the academic style of oil painting
that used a European medium to depict Indian
subject matter. The most successful examples
of this type of painting were found away from
these art schools. They are best seen in the
works produced by self-taught artist, Raja Ravi
Varma of the Travancore Court in Kerala. By
imitating copies of European paintings popular
in Indian palaces, he mastered the style of
academic realism and used it to depict scenes
from popular epics like the Ramayana and
Mahabharata. They became so popular that
many of his paintings were copied as oleographs
and were sold in market. They even entered people’s homes as
calendar images. With the rise of nationalism in India by the
end of the nineteenth century, this academic style embraced
by Raja Ravi Varma came to be looked down upon as foreign
and too western to show Indian myths and history. It is
amidst such nationalist thinking that the Bengal School of Art
emerged in the first decade of the twentieth century.
The Bengal School
The term ‘Bengal School of Art’ is not fully accurate. It is true
that the first move to create a modern, nationalist school
happened in Bengal but it was not restricted to this region
alone. It was an art movement and a style of painting that
originated in Calcutta, the centre of British power, but later
influenced many artists in different parts of the country,
including Shantiniketan, where India’s first national art
school was founded. It was associated with the nationalist
movement (Swadeshi) and spearheaded by Abanindranath
Tagore (1871–1951). Abanindranath enjoyed the support of
British administrator and principal of the Calcutta School
of Art, E. B. Havell (1861–1934). Both Abanindranath and
Havell were critical of colonial Art Schools and the manner in
which European taste in art was being imposed on Indians.
They firmly believed in creating a new type of painting that
Raja Ravi Varma,
Krishna as envoy,
1906. NGMA, New Delhi, India
1_6.Bengali Painting.indd 86 14-12-2021 15:23:41
Rationalised 2023-24
t he BengAl School And c ulturAl n AtIonAlISm 87
was Indian not only in subject matter but also in style. For
them, Mughal and Pahari miniatures, for example, were
more important sources of inspiration, rather than either the
Company School of Painting or academic style taught in the
colonial Art Schools.
Abanindranath Tagore and E. B. Havell
The year 1896 was important in the Indian history of visual
arts. E. B. Havell and Abanindranath Tagore saw a need to
Indianise art education in the country. This began in the
Government Art School, Calcutta, now, Government College
of Art and Craft, Kolkata. Similar art schools were established
in Lahore, Bombay and Madras but their primary focus was
on crafts like metalwork, furniture and curios. However,
the one in Calcutta was more inclined towards fine arts.
Havell and Abanindranath Tagore designed a curriculum
to include and encourage technique and themes in Indian
art traditions. Abanindranath’s Journey’s End shows the
influence of Mughal and Pahari miniatures, and his desire to
create an Indian style in painting.
Art historian Partha Mitter writes, “The first generation of
the students of Abanindranath engaged in recovering the lost
language of Indian art.” To create awareness that modern
Indians could benefit from this rich past, Abanindranath
was the main artist and creator of an important journal,
Indian Society of Oriental Art. In this manner, he was also
the first major supporter of Swadeshi values in Indian art,
which best manifested in the creation of Bengal School of
Art. This school set the stage for the development of modern
Indian painting. The new direction opened by Abanindranath
was followed by many younger artists like Kshitindranath
Majumdar (Rasa-Lila) and M. R. Chughtai (Radhika).
Shantiniketan — Early modernism
Nandalal Bose, a student of Abanindranath Tagore, was
invited by poet and philosopher Rabindranath Tagore to
head the painting department in the newly established
Kala Bhavana. Kala Bhavana was India’s first national art
school. It was part of the Visva-Bharati University founded
by Rabindranath Tagore at Shantiniketan. At Kala Bhavana,
Nandalal founded the intellectual and artistic milieu to create
an Indian style in art. By paying attention to the folk art forms
that he saw around in Shantiniketan, he began to focus on
1_6.Bengali Painting.indd 87 01 Sep 2020 03:54:46 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
Page 4
Company Painting
A
rt in India had a different purpose prior to the coming of
the British. It could be seen as statues on temple walls,
miniature paintings that often illustrated manuscripts,
decoration on the walls of mud houses in villages, among
many other examples. With the colonial rule around the
eighteenth century, the English were charmed by different
manners and customs of people of all ranks, tropical flora
and fauna, and varying locales. Partly for documentation
and partly for artistic reasons, many English officers
commissioned local artists to paint scenes around them to
get a better idea of the natives. The paintings were largely
made on paper by local artists, some of whom had migrated
from erstwhile courts of Murshidabad, Lucknow or Delhi. To
please their new patrons, they had to adapt their traditional
way of painting to document
the world around them. This
meant that they had to rely
more on close observation,
a striking feature of the
European art, rather than
memory and rule books, as
seen in traditional art. It is
this mixture of traditional and
European style of painting
that came to be known as the
Company School of Painting.
This style was not only popular
among the British in India but
even in Britain, where albums,
consisting a set of paintings
were much in demand.
6
The Bengal School and Cultural
Nationalism
Ghulam Ali Khan,
Group of Courtesans,
Company Painting, 1800–1825.
San Diego Museum of Art,
California, USA
1_6.Bengali Painting.indd 85 01 Sep 2020 03:54:46 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
86 An IntroductIon to IndIAn Art —PArt II
Raja Ravi Varma
This style declined with the entry of photography
in India in the mid–nineteenth century as camera
offered a better way of documentation. What,
However, flourished in the art schools set up by
the British was the academic style of oil painting
that used a European medium to depict Indian
subject matter. The most successful examples
of this type of painting were found away from
these art schools. They are best seen in the
works produced by self-taught artist, Raja Ravi
Varma of the Travancore Court in Kerala. By
imitating copies of European paintings popular
in Indian palaces, he mastered the style of
academic realism and used it to depict scenes
from popular epics like the Ramayana and
Mahabharata. They became so popular that
many of his paintings were copied as oleographs
and were sold in market. They even entered people’s homes as
calendar images. With the rise of nationalism in India by the
end of the nineteenth century, this academic style embraced
by Raja Ravi Varma came to be looked down upon as foreign
and too western to show Indian myths and history. It is
amidst such nationalist thinking that the Bengal School of Art
emerged in the first decade of the twentieth century.
The Bengal School
The term ‘Bengal School of Art’ is not fully accurate. It is true
that the first move to create a modern, nationalist school
happened in Bengal but it was not restricted to this region
alone. It was an art movement and a style of painting that
originated in Calcutta, the centre of British power, but later
influenced many artists in different parts of the country,
including Shantiniketan, where India’s first national art
school was founded. It was associated with the nationalist
movement (Swadeshi) and spearheaded by Abanindranath
Tagore (1871–1951). Abanindranath enjoyed the support of
British administrator and principal of the Calcutta School
of Art, E. B. Havell (1861–1934). Both Abanindranath and
Havell were critical of colonial Art Schools and the manner in
which European taste in art was being imposed on Indians.
They firmly believed in creating a new type of painting that
Raja Ravi Varma,
Krishna as envoy,
1906. NGMA, New Delhi, India
1_6.Bengali Painting.indd 86 14-12-2021 15:23:41
Rationalised 2023-24
t he BengAl School And c ulturAl n AtIonAlISm 87
was Indian not only in subject matter but also in style. For
them, Mughal and Pahari miniatures, for example, were
more important sources of inspiration, rather than either the
Company School of Painting or academic style taught in the
colonial Art Schools.
Abanindranath Tagore and E. B. Havell
The year 1896 was important in the Indian history of visual
arts. E. B. Havell and Abanindranath Tagore saw a need to
Indianise art education in the country. This began in the
Government Art School, Calcutta, now, Government College
of Art and Craft, Kolkata. Similar art schools were established
in Lahore, Bombay and Madras but their primary focus was
on crafts like metalwork, furniture and curios. However,
the one in Calcutta was more inclined towards fine arts.
Havell and Abanindranath Tagore designed a curriculum
to include and encourage technique and themes in Indian
art traditions. Abanindranath’s Journey’s End shows the
influence of Mughal and Pahari miniatures, and his desire to
create an Indian style in painting.
Art historian Partha Mitter writes, “The first generation of
the students of Abanindranath engaged in recovering the lost
language of Indian art.” To create awareness that modern
Indians could benefit from this rich past, Abanindranath
was the main artist and creator of an important journal,
Indian Society of Oriental Art. In this manner, he was also
the first major supporter of Swadeshi values in Indian art,
which best manifested in the creation of Bengal School of
Art. This school set the stage for the development of modern
Indian painting. The new direction opened by Abanindranath
was followed by many younger artists like Kshitindranath
Majumdar (Rasa-Lila) and M. R. Chughtai (Radhika).
Shantiniketan — Early modernism
Nandalal Bose, a student of Abanindranath Tagore, was
invited by poet and philosopher Rabindranath Tagore to
head the painting department in the newly established
Kala Bhavana. Kala Bhavana was India’s first national art
school. It was part of the Visva-Bharati University founded
by Rabindranath Tagore at Shantiniketan. At Kala Bhavana,
Nandalal founded the intellectual and artistic milieu to create
an Indian style in art. By paying attention to the folk art forms
that he saw around in Shantiniketan, he began to focus on
1_6.Bengali Painting.indd 87 01 Sep 2020 03:54:46 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
88 An IntroductIon to IndIAn Art —PArt II
the language of art. He also illustrated primers
in Bengali with woodcuts and understood
the role of art in teaching new ideas. For this
reason, Mahatma Gandhi invited him to paint
panels that were put on display at the Congress
session at Haripura in 1937. Famously called
the ‘Haripura Posters’, they depicted ordinary
rural folks busy in various activities — a
musician drumming, a farmer tilling, a woman
churning milk, and so on. They were painted
as lively colourful sketchy figures and shown
as contributing their labour to nation building.
These posters echoed with Gandhi’s socialist
vision of including marginalised sections of
Indian society through art.
Kala Bhavana, the institution where Bose
taught art, inspired many young artists to
carry forward this nationalist vision. It became
a training ground for many artists, who
taught art in different parts of the country.
K. Venkatappa in South India being a
prominent example. They wanted art to reach
out to a wider public rather than only the elite,
anglicised class of people.
Jamini Roy is a unique example of modern
Indian artist, who after undergoing academic
training in the colonial Art School rejected
it only to adopt the flat and colourful style of
folk painting seen in villages. He wanted his
paintings to be simple and easy to duplicate
to reach a wider public and based on themes
like women and children, specifically, and rural
life, generally.
However, the struggle between the Indian
and European taste in art continued as seen in
the art policy of the British Raj. For example,
the project for mural decorations for Lutyen’s
Delhi buildings went to the students of Bombay
School of Art, trained in realistic studies by its
Principal, Gladstone Solomon. On the other
hand, the Bengal School artists were allowed
to decorate the Indian House in London under
close British supervision.
K. Venkatappa, Rama’s marriage,
1914. Private Collection, India
Nandalal Bose, Dhaki, Haripura Posters,
1937. NGMA, New Delhi, India
1_6.Bengali Painting.indd 88 01 Sep 2020 03:54:47 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
Page 5
Company Painting
A
rt in India had a different purpose prior to the coming of
the British. It could be seen as statues on temple walls,
miniature paintings that often illustrated manuscripts,
decoration on the walls of mud houses in villages, among
many other examples. With the colonial rule around the
eighteenth century, the English were charmed by different
manners and customs of people of all ranks, tropical flora
and fauna, and varying locales. Partly for documentation
and partly for artistic reasons, many English officers
commissioned local artists to paint scenes around them to
get a better idea of the natives. The paintings were largely
made on paper by local artists, some of whom had migrated
from erstwhile courts of Murshidabad, Lucknow or Delhi. To
please their new patrons, they had to adapt their traditional
way of painting to document
the world around them. This
meant that they had to rely
more on close observation,
a striking feature of the
European art, rather than
memory and rule books, as
seen in traditional art. It is
this mixture of traditional and
European style of painting
that came to be known as the
Company School of Painting.
This style was not only popular
among the British in India but
even in Britain, where albums,
consisting a set of paintings
were much in demand.
6
The Bengal School and Cultural
Nationalism
Ghulam Ali Khan,
Group of Courtesans,
Company Painting, 1800–1825.
San Diego Museum of Art,
California, USA
1_6.Bengali Painting.indd 85 01 Sep 2020 03:54:46 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
86 An IntroductIon to IndIAn Art —PArt II
Raja Ravi Varma
This style declined with the entry of photography
in India in the mid–nineteenth century as camera
offered a better way of documentation. What,
However, flourished in the art schools set up by
the British was the academic style of oil painting
that used a European medium to depict Indian
subject matter. The most successful examples
of this type of painting were found away from
these art schools. They are best seen in the
works produced by self-taught artist, Raja Ravi
Varma of the Travancore Court in Kerala. By
imitating copies of European paintings popular
in Indian palaces, he mastered the style of
academic realism and used it to depict scenes
from popular epics like the Ramayana and
Mahabharata. They became so popular that
many of his paintings were copied as oleographs
and were sold in market. They even entered people’s homes as
calendar images. With the rise of nationalism in India by the
end of the nineteenth century, this academic style embraced
by Raja Ravi Varma came to be looked down upon as foreign
and too western to show Indian myths and history. It is
amidst such nationalist thinking that the Bengal School of Art
emerged in the first decade of the twentieth century.
The Bengal School
The term ‘Bengal School of Art’ is not fully accurate. It is true
that the first move to create a modern, nationalist school
happened in Bengal but it was not restricted to this region
alone. It was an art movement and a style of painting that
originated in Calcutta, the centre of British power, but later
influenced many artists in different parts of the country,
including Shantiniketan, where India’s first national art
school was founded. It was associated with the nationalist
movement (Swadeshi) and spearheaded by Abanindranath
Tagore (1871–1951). Abanindranath enjoyed the support of
British administrator and principal of the Calcutta School
of Art, E. B. Havell (1861–1934). Both Abanindranath and
Havell were critical of colonial Art Schools and the manner in
which European taste in art was being imposed on Indians.
They firmly believed in creating a new type of painting that
Raja Ravi Varma,
Krishna as envoy,
1906. NGMA, New Delhi, India
1_6.Bengali Painting.indd 86 14-12-2021 15:23:41
Rationalised 2023-24
t he BengAl School And c ulturAl n AtIonAlISm 87
was Indian not only in subject matter but also in style. For
them, Mughal and Pahari miniatures, for example, were
more important sources of inspiration, rather than either the
Company School of Painting or academic style taught in the
colonial Art Schools.
Abanindranath Tagore and E. B. Havell
The year 1896 was important in the Indian history of visual
arts. E. B. Havell and Abanindranath Tagore saw a need to
Indianise art education in the country. This began in the
Government Art School, Calcutta, now, Government College
of Art and Craft, Kolkata. Similar art schools were established
in Lahore, Bombay and Madras but their primary focus was
on crafts like metalwork, furniture and curios. However,
the one in Calcutta was more inclined towards fine arts.
Havell and Abanindranath Tagore designed a curriculum
to include and encourage technique and themes in Indian
art traditions. Abanindranath’s Journey’s End shows the
influence of Mughal and Pahari miniatures, and his desire to
create an Indian style in painting.
Art historian Partha Mitter writes, “The first generation of
the students of Abanindranath engaged in recovering the lost
language of Indian art.” To create awareness that modern
Indians could benefit from this rich past, Abanindranath
was the main artist and creator of an important journal,
Indian Society of Oriental Art. In this manner, he was also
the first major supporter of Swadeshi values in Indian art,
which best manifested in the creation of Bengal School of
Art. This school set the stage for the development of modern
Indian painting. The new direction opened by Abanindranath
was followed by many younger artists like Kshitindranath
Majumdar (Rasa-Lila) and M. R. Chughtai (Radhika).
Shantiniketan — Early modernism
Nandalal Bose, a student of Abanindranath Tagore, was
invited by poet and philosopher Rabindranath Tagore to
head the painting department in the newly established
Kala Bhavana. Kala Bhavana was India’s first national art
school. It was part of the Visva-Bharati University founded
by Rabindranath Tagore at Shantiniketan. At Kala Bhavana,
Nandalal founded the intellectual and artistic milieu to create
an Indian style in art. By paying attention to the folk art forms
that he saw around in Shantiniketan, he began to focus on
1_6.Bengali Painting.indd 87 01 Sep 2020 03:54:46 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
88 An IntroductIon to IndIAn Art —PArt II
the language of art. He also illustrated primers
in Bengali with woodcuts and understood
the role of art in teaching new ideas. For this
reason, Mahatma Gandhi invited him to paint
panels that were put on display at the Congress
session at Haripura in 1937. Famously called
the ‘Haripura Posters’, they depicted ordinary
rural folks busy in various activities — a
musician drumming, a farmer tilling, a woman
churning milk, and so on. They were painted
as lively colourful sketchy figures and shown
as contributing their labour to nation building.
These posters echoed with Gandhi’s socialist
vision of including marginalised sections of
Indian society through art.
Kala Bhavana, the institution where Bose
taught art, inspired many young artists to
carry forward this nationalist vision. It became
a training ground for many artists, who
taught art in different parts of the country.
K. Venkatappa in South India being a
prominent example. They wanted art to reach
out to a wider public rather than only the elite,
anglicised class of people.
Jamini Roy is a unique example of modern
Indian artist, who after undergoing academic
training in the colonial Art School rejected
it only to adopt the flat and colourful style of
folk painting seen in villages. He wanted his
paintings to be simple and easy to duplicate
to reach a wider public and based on themes
like women and children, specifically, and rural
life, generally.
However, the struggle between the Indian
and European taste in art continued as seen in
the art policy of the British Raj. For example,
the project for mural decorations for Lutyen’s
Delhi buildings went to the students of Bombay
School of Art, trained in realistic studies by its
Principal, Gladstone Solomon. On the other
hand, the Bengal School artists were allowed
to decorate the Indian House in London under
close British supervision.
K. Venkatappa, Rama’s marriage,
1914. Private Collection, India
Nandalal Bose, Dhaki, Haripura Posters,
1937. NGMA, New Delhi, India
1_6.Bengali Painting.indd 88 01 Sep 2020 03:54:47 PM
Rationalised 2023-24
t he BengAl School And c ulturAl n AtIonAlISm 89
Pan-Asianism and Modernism
The colonial art policy had created a divide between those
who liked the European academic style and those who favoured
Indian style. But following the Partition of Bengal in 1905, the
Swadeshi movement was at its peak and it reflected in ideas
about art. Ananda Coomaraswamy, an important art historian,
wrote about Swadeshi in art and joined hands with a Japanese
nationalist, Kakuzo Okakura, who was visiting Rabindranath
Tagore in Calcutta. He came to India with his ideas about
pan-Asianism, by which he wanted to unite India with other
eastern nations and fight against western imperialism. Two
Japanese artists accompanied him to Calcutta, who went to
Shantiniketan to teach wash technique of painting to Indian
students as an alternative to western oil painting.
If, on one hand, pan-Asianism was gaining popularity,
ideas about modern European art also travelled to India.
Hence, the year 1922 may be regarded as a remarkable
one, when an important exhibition of works by Paul Klee,
Kandinsky and other artists, who were part of the Bauhaus
School in Germany, travelled to Calcutta. These European
artists had rejected academic realism, which appealed to the
Swadeshi artists. They created a more abstract language of
art, consisting of squares, circles, lines and colour patches.
For the first time, Indian artists and the public had a direct
encounter with modern art of this kind. It is in the paintings
by Gaganendranath Tagore, brother of Abanindranath
Tagore, that the influence of modern western style of
paintings can be clearly seen. He made several paintings
using Cubist style, in which building interiors were created
out of geometric patterns. Besides, he was deeply interested
in making caricatures, in which he often made fun of rich
Bengalis blindly following the European style of living.
Different Concepts of Modernism: Western and Indian
The divide between anglicists and orientalists, as mentioned
earlier, was not based on race. Take the case of the Bengali
intellectual, Benoy Sarkar, who sided with the anglicists
and considered modernism that was growing in Europe as
authentic in an article, ‘The Futurism of Young Asia’. For
him, the Oriental Bengal School of Art was regressive and
anti-modern. On the other hand, it was E. B. Havell, an
Englishman, who was in favour of return to native art to
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