The pioneer of Bangladeshi modern art
Zainul Abedin is widely acclaimed for his Bengal ‘Famine Sketches’. Through a
series of sketches, Zainul not only documented the harsh famine of 1940 but
also showed its sinister face through the skeletal figures of the people
destined to die of starvation in a man-made plight. He depicted these extremely
shocking pictures with human compassion. He made his own ink by burning
charcoal and using cheap ordinary packing paper for sketching. He produced a
series of brush and ink drawings, which later became iconic images of human
sufferings.
Zainul developed a knack for drawing and
painting when he was a high school student. After completing high school, he
got admission to the Government School of Art, Calcutta (now Kolkata). He
graduated with the first position in first class in 1938. He was appointed
teacher of the Art School while he was still a student there. He also attended
the Slade School of Arts, London in 1951-52.
Zainul Abedin is considered the founding
father of Bangladeshi art. He was an artist of outstanding talent and earned
international reputation. For his artistic and visionary qualities, he is referred
to as Shilpacharya meaning ‘great teacher of art’ in Bangladesh. He was the
first Principal of the first art school in Dhaka in East Pakistan (now
Bangladesh). He organized the Nabanna (harvest) exhibition in 1969. In the
exhibition, a 65-foot long scroll portraying the rural East Pakistan in phases
from abundance to poverty. This intensified the already heightened
non-cooperation movement against the Pakistan regime. The exhibition was
symbolic of the artists protest and a milestone in demanding cultural and
political freedom. Zainul’s dynamic style of work is evident in a 30 foot long
scroll painting called Manpura, which was done to commemorate the death of
hundreds and thousands of people in the devastating cyclone of 1970.
He designed the pages of Constitution of
Bangladesh. He founded the Folk Art Museum at Sonargoan, and also Zainul Abedin
Shangrahasala, a gallery of his own works in Mymensingh in 1975.
The river Brahmaputra plays a predominant
role in his paintings and a source of inspiration all through his career. Much
of his childhood was spent near the scenic beauty of the river Brahmaputra. A
series of water colours that Zainul did as his tribute to the river earned him
the Governor’s Gold Medal in an all-India exhibition in 1938. This was the
first time when he came into spotlight and this award gave him the confidence
to create his own visual style.
Zainul was born in Kishoreganj on 29
December 1914, and died on 28 May, 1976.
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