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    Google pays tribute to modernist Jamini Roy

    Search engine Google paid tribute to India’s first modernist Jamini Roy on his 130th birth anniversary with a doodle that chronicles his prolific career spanning over six decades.

    Google pays tribute to modernist Jamini Roy
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    The Ramayan is considered his magnum opus and is spread across 17 canvases

    New Delhi

    Roy who was tutored under the Bengal School of Art under the mentorship of Abanindranath Tagore, shifted from the academic tradition of drawing classical nudes and went on to derive inspiration from the Indian culture. After graduating, the doodle notes, most of Roy’s paintings were in Western styles, like portraiture and Impressionism. 

    “However, influenced by the growing surge of nationalism, he consciously rejected Western artistic styles and searched for a more ‘Indian’ form of artistic expression. “He sought inspiration from East Asian calligraphy, terracotta temple friezes, folk arts and crafts traditions. From calligraphy, to animals, to Jesus Christ, his work encompassed many different subjects and motifs,” the doodle reads. 

    Although painted decades ago, it is fascinating to see the universality and timelessness of Roy’s quintessential contours and colour scheme, his representation of the humble santhal community of Bengal and his sensitive yet sensuous treatment of the female form in his artworks. 

    The doodle features iconic works from different phases of his career - ‘Three Pujarins’, ‘Portrait of a Lady’ , the ‘Krishna Leela’, ‘Christ’, and the ‘Mother and Child’ series among others, which were part of a special exhibition on the artist by National Gallery of Modern Art here, to commemmorate Roy’s 125th birth anniversary. Roy died in 1972. 

    Remembering Roy
    His underlying quest was threefold: to capture the essence of simplicity embodied in the life of the folk people; to make art accessible to a wider section of people; and to give Indian art its own identity
    Jamini Roy’s paintings were put on exhibition for the first time in the British India Street of Calcutta (Kolkata) in 1938 
    During the 1940s, the Bengali middle class and Europeans became his main clientèle 
    Jamini Roy was awarded the Padma Bhusan in 1954
    Google created a doodled version of his famous painting ‘Black Horse’ on Tuesday

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