ARTISTS PROFILE
GANESH PYNE
Ganesh Pyne is obsessed with death. He can’t forget his first brush with death, in the summer of 1946, when communal riots had rocked Kolkata. His family was forced out of their crumbling mansion. As he roamed around the city, he stumbled upon a pile of dead bodies. On the top was the body of a stark naked old woman, with wounds on her breast. No wonder then his paintings rarely has light backgrounds, and blue and black happens to be his favorite colors. Death also finds its way back into his canvas through different motifs. Working mostly in tempera, his paintings are rich in imagery and symbolism.
Pyne was born in Kolkata and grew up in a decaying mansion. He also grew up on stories told by his grandmother — fold stories, mythological stories, and fairy tales. He spent several evenings in smoky Kolkata cafes discussing communism and Picasso with his friends. “My childhood memories revolve around Kolkata. The sounds and smells of this city fill my being. I love Kolkata.”
He doesn remember the first time he started to paint, but does remember the anger that he drew from his family over his decision to become an artist. Pyne, nevertheless, took admission in the Government College of Arts and Crafts, Kolkata. “My first painting was & ‘Winter’s Mornin which showed me and my brother going to school,” he recalls. In 1963, he joined the Society for Contemporary Artists. During that period he made small drawings in pen and ink. “I did not have enough money then to buy color,” Pyne says. This was also the period of experimentation. The anger and despair of the 70s fuelled one of the most fruitful periods’ in his life as an artist that culminated in works like & ‘Before the Chariot&’ and ‘The Assassin’.
However, sometime in the 80s, he shut himself from the world, driven away by the jealousy and pettiness that the art bazaar arose among his friends.
Initially, Pyne painted watercolors and sketches of misty mornings and wayside temples, variously influenced as he was by Walt Disney and the art of Abanindranath Tagore. He counts Hals Rembrandt and Paul Klee as the other influences.
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