• NGMA India

    Nandalal Bose

    A Sketch from Album No. 87 9221 Nandalal Bose Pen & Ink on postcard

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Nandalal had a strong affinity for sketching, his subjects being the surrounding environs, people in their everyday life or anything that he found fascinating. His firm belief that for the creation of art an intimate understanding of the nature and its ways is imperative. The range of Nandalal's artistic expression can be seen in the changing Indian landscapes, his varied images of nature and the portrayal of people and places. Dinkar Kowshik in his article 'Drawings and Sketches of Nandalal in the book, 'Nandalal Bose - A collection of Essays has written of Nandalal's sketches and drawings -" Nandalal's drawings are vast in number and varied in technical interest. He was indefatigable in his search for form and to the end of his life he remained a student. Whatever he saw, and wherever he went he recorded the flora and fauna, the people of the place, their dress, their carriages, the head-dresses, the landscape, the festivals, the architecture, and while doing that he went on attaining a felicity of expression." In this sketch the artist has portrayed the ambiance of a ravine formed by river Kopai through which a woman and a young girl walks through balancing their earthen pots on the heads. The artist has acutely noted the finer details of the landscape with thickets surrounding the banks and a flock of birds in the distant horizon. Sketches as these are testimony of Nandalal's keen sense of observation and his empathy for the environment in which he lived.