Saturday, April 27, 2024
…

News Destination For The Global Indian Community

News Destination For The Global Indian Community

ART & FASHION
LifeMag
Artist Sushanta Guha showcases the power of expression through six lithographs and four etchings

Artist Sushanta Guha showcases the power of expression through six lithographs and four etchings

The Visual Arts Gallery exhibition witnessed a series of prints under the name ‘Multiple Encounters by mentor and printmaker Sushanta Guha. Human figures as a reflection of fantasy and inventiveness rolled into one, the prints make you look at the hands, the details and the power of expression in these six lithographs and four etchings. Among the greatest prints, has been Albrecht Dürer’s Rhinoceros that I saw at the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC. History states that Dürer was alive at the time Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés and his partners were claiming the New World for Spain. The exotic valuables they brought back to King Charles V (weapons, textiles and more) was the talk of Europe.

Indian Rhinoceros

Dürer saw a selection of Meso-American treasures on a trip to Brussels in August 1520. According to an entry in his travel diary, Dürer had ‘not seen anything in (his) whole life that delighted (his) heart as much as these, marvelously-artistic things.’

It was around this time that Portuguese adventurers caused an even greater sensation by transporting a rhinoceros to Europe from India for their king, Manuel I. Dürer never saw the animal himself but cashed in on the furor about it — producing a woodcut image of the rhino, based on a sketch by a German merchant in Lisbon. Dürer’s version came with numerous fanciful additions, intended to fire the viewer’s imagination — including folds of skin that looked like armor.

Richness of images

Coming back to Sushanta, he gives us a visual stew in which details dissolve into a primordial puddle and has a kind of repulsive yet resonant fascination. His squiggly line drawings take an ardent delight in things that multiply or mutate but in inventive, quirky forms. Sushanta creates yeasty transformations in drawing with all the linear subtlety and complexity of Albrecht Dürer engravings.

His etchings and lithographs strongly evoke the passionate prowess of the ‘Old Masters’ and it is this versatile quality that transformed the very taste and tensile offerings of this epic showcase of five printmakers.

Stunning lithographs

As a printmaker, Sushanta is a man of a few words, “I generally work consecutively in two different media — etching and lithograph. Although I have worked in all the disciplines in a printmaking media, lithography is my favorite medium,†says Sushanta. He adds, “I start with sketchy drawings first and then keep adding on along with my concept till the final drawing with complete satisfaction.â€

The two media — different as they are — share the quality of mechanically simplifying the task of making and reproducing pictures. In lithography, artists draw directly on flat stones that also act as the printing plate. It’s a very supple and efficient method. Artists started working in olden years with historical examples. Sushanta’s works stood out because they gave a sense of being modern throughout.

Strength of imagery

There’s a touch of familiar time in Sushanta’s human figures. Even though the subject of the human figure is classical, the images he creates hover on the surface like a modern-day TV picture soaring through differential speeds. While he alludes to the idea of characters that swim through time and testimony, he also hints at the invention of the idea of artistic modernism through his technique and his tenor.

What defines a good lithograph? Firstly and foremost, it is a question of quality and how strong, clear and rich the image appears. Printing quality, however, is a matter of judgment and experience, and therefore subjective. In many instances, there is hard evidence concerning the chronology of the printing, as prints often existed in different states. But it is the clarity of images that define the quality. The success of Sushanta’s prints lie in the quality of resultant details and impact on the viewer’s senses telling us about truths of printmaking.

So much of beauty and of what propels our pursuit of truth in artistic domains stems from the invisible connections — between ideas, disciplines, denizens of a particular time and place, the interior world of each pioneer and the mark they leave on the cave walls of cultures. Sushanta’s human figures are like beings flitting from one phase of Nocturne to another, causing through the torchlight of a revolution that lights the new day.

Writer – Uma Nair, Courtesy – Pioneer

Artist Sushanta Guha showcases the power of expression through six lithographs and four etchings

Artist Sushanta Guha showcases the power of expression through six lithographs and four etchings

The Visual Arts Gallery exhibition witnessed a series of prints under the name ‘Multiple Encounters by mentor and printmaker Sushanta Guha. Human figures as a reflection of fantasy and inventiveness rolled into one, the prints make you look at the hands, the details and the power of expression in these six lithographs and four etchings. Among the greatest prints, has been Albrecht Dürer’s Rhinoceros that I saw at the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC. History states that Dürer was alive at the time Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés and his partners were claiming the New World for Spain. The exotic valuables they brought back to King Charles V (weapons, textiles and more) was the talk of Europe.

Indian Rhinoceros

Dürer saw a selection of Meso-American treasures on a trip to Brussels in August 1520. According to an entry in his travel diary, Dürer had ‘not seen anything in (his) whole life that delighted (his) heart as much as these, marvelously-artistic things.’

It was around this time that Portuguese adventurers caused an even greater sensation by transporting a rhinoceros to Europe from India for their king, Manuel I. Dürer never saw the animal himself but cashed in on the furor about it — producing a woodcut image of the rhino, based on a sketch by a German merchant in Lisbon. Dürer’s version came with numerous fanciful additions, intended to fire the viewer’s imagination — including folds of skin that looked like armor.

Richness of images

Coming back to Sushanta, he gives us a visual stew in which details dissolve into a primordial puddle and has a kind of repulsive yet resonant fascination. His squiggly line drawings take an ardent delight in things that multiply or mutate but in inventive, quirky forms. Sushanta creates yeasty transformations in drawing with all the linear subtlety and complexity of Albrecht Dürer engravings.

His etchings and lithographs strongly evoke the passionate prowess of the ‘Old Masters’ and it is this versatile quality that transformed the very taste and tensile offerings of this epic showcase of five printmakers.

Stunning lithographs

As a printmaker, Sushanta is a man of a few words, “I generally work consecutively in two different media — etching and lithograph. Although I have worked in all the disciplines in a printmaking media, lithography is my favorite medium,†says Sushanta. He adds, “I start with sketchy drawings first and then keep adding on along with my concept till the final drawing with complete satisfaction.â€

The two media — different as they are — share the quality of mechanically simplifying the task of making and reproducing pictures. In lithography, artists draw directly on flat stones that also act as the printing plate. It’s a very supple and efficient method. Artists started working in olden years with historical examples. Sushanta’s works stood out because they gave a sense of being modern throughout.

Strength of imagery

There’s a touch of familiar time in Sushanta’s human figures. Even though the subject of the human figure is classical, the images he creates hover on the surface like a modern-day TV picture soaring through differential speeds. While he alludes to the idea of characters that swim through time and testimony, he also hints at the invention of the idea of artistic modernism through his technique and his tenor.

What defines a good lithograph? Firstly and foremost, it is a question of quality and how strong, clear and rich the image appears. Printing quality, however, is a matter of judgment and experience, and therefore subjective. In many instances, there is hard evidence concerning the chronology of the printing, as prints often existed in different states. But it is the clarity of images that define the quality. The success of Sushanta’s prints lie in the quality of resultant details and impact on the viewer’s senses telling us about truths of printmaking.

So much of beauty and of what propels our pursuit of truth in artistic domains stems from the invisible connections — between ideas, disciplines, denizens of a particular time and place, the interior world of each pioneer and the mark they leave on the cave walls of cultures. Sushanta’s human figures are like beings flitting from one phase of Nocturne to another, causing through the torchlight of a revolution that lights the new day.

Writer – Uma Nair, Courtesy – Pioneer

Leave a comment

Comments (0)

Related Articles

Opinion Express TV

Shapoorji Pallonji

SUNGROW

GOVNEXT INDIA FOUNDATION

CAMBIUM NETWORKS TECHNOLOGY

Opinion Express Magazine