Jamini Roy Quote
“Peace is not good for an artist. How can that happen? The mind strives and burns all the time in the creative activity of art.”
Jamini Roy
How Are Jamini Roy Paintings a Description of Indian Folk Art
The legend of Jamini Roy can plainly be described best by the following excerpt from a poem by Nissim Ezekiel, who was a valued admirer of Roy’s work, titled “Jamini Roy:”
“Among the adult fantasies
Of sex and power-ridden lives,
Refusing their hostilities,
His all-assenting art survives.”
As the excerpt very strikingly puts it, The power in Jamini Roy’s paintings is derived from the underlying fact that Roy refused to believe the universally accepted notion of how the major motivations behind human actions are power plays or lust. Artist Jamini Roy could look beyond the superficial to see romanticism and capture the intricacies of human life. Ezekiel sees his brilliance, depicting him as a saviour in a world devoid of order and inflicted with the chaos of the insincere.
The Life of Artist Jamini Roy
Born on April 11th, 1887, Jamini Roy was an Indian painter who was predominantly famous for his works on rural people, the Santhals and Indian Folk Art. In his younger days, at the mere age of 16, Roy attended art school, wherein he studied the Western styles of artwork, following which Roy started to make commissioned portraits. However, due to the ongoing wave of nationalism, Roy decided to drop the art style. During this period, is when true individualism of Roy started showcasing in his works. In the 1920s, Roy pursued Indian Folk Art to find a more nationalist and Indian form of expression. Stretched elongated eyes, bright colour schemes and a focus on the subject are some of the characteristic features of Jamini Roy paintings.
Jamini Roy’s Love of the Kalighat Paintings
The altercations with Indian Folk Art, techniques that have been preserved for over 3000 years, and the customary meetings with the rural and the Santhal tribe completely changed the trajectory of artist Jamini Roy paintings. He started depicting instances from rural lives and everyday instances of the villages and the tribes. It is said that Roy portrays his themes through strict lines, symmetrical, intriguing colour schemes and calligraphic brush strokes. Moreover, In the early years of the 1920s, Roy incorporated the “Flat Technique” in several artworks.
It is important to highlight the secular format of Jamini Roy paintings. Roy described himself as a Patua — which is a community of artisans that exists in the states of Bihar, Bengal, Jharkhand, etc. — and his paintings follow the Kalighat paintings, characterized by bold brushstrokes. Roy majorly painted scenes from the Indian mythology of Ramayana and Krishna, however, the artist did not limit himself to Hinduism as he created paintings depicting the crucifixion of Christ.
Why is Jamini Roy STILL Making Waves?
Artist Jamini Roy is deemed to be one of the most legendary painters of Modernist India, with major contributions to the period. He introduced the South Asian style of iconography to the Modern Art Movement of the 20th century. It is his ageless talent and the evergreen relevance of his artwork that awarded him several accolades, such as Padma Bhushan, Lalit Kala Akademi and the Viceroy’s gold medal.
In an era where the largest part of the upcoming generations feel the need to keep up with the West, Jamini Roy artworks are living proof of why we need to get back to our roots to be authentic and original while exploring our individuality in a world full of impersonators and mimics.
Jamini Roy’s studio in Kolkata – acquired by DAG – underwent a restoration process. It was renovated into a Modernist Art experience which would include a cafe, artefacts, rotational shows, tools used by him and his original artworks. This space is an experience that incorporates the life, art and architecture of the Father of the Folk Renaissance and Indian Folk Art. The project will be completed by the end of 2024.
Image Courtesy – DAG
Vaishnavi Srivastava is a learning writer, a keen researcher and a literature enthusiast. She is a Sub-editor at Abir Pothi.