The Artist
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One of India's greatest Modern painters, Akbar Padamsee gets ready with his first exhibition of giclée prints.
Among the Progressive artists, Akbar Padamsee has been the quietest. Not that the 84-year-old doesn't have an immense body of work, but because he wasn't as prolific as MF Husain or SH Raza. FN Souza sadly passed away too early, thus missing the art boom of the last decade.
Almost as if to catch up, Padamsee now finds himself in the news often enough. His last exhibition of canvases was only two years ago. A year ago, his Reclining Nude fetched a record price at Sotheby's. "Six crores," he says, as if we didn't already know.
February sees him partake of a remarkable exercise — Mumbai's India Fine Art Gallery has put together a showcase of some giclée prints. Priced at Rs 1.5–3 lakh, these are prints on canvas produced on large-format high-resolution inkjet printers and are serious collectibles. Among these are four landscapes and two signature heads. "I'll also add some 20 lithographs and one or two canvases," he adds. The artist also has a solo scheduled at the India Art Fair in Delhi next month.
We are meeting at his Prabhadevi home in Mumbai, where one luminescent room has been turned into a studio for the master. The space is filled with works-in-progress, boxes of Winsor and Newton tubes of colour, a freakish hanging skeleton and not much else. A 30-year-old fractured knee cap makes him hobble now, and Padamsee's voice is just about audible. But he shows a boyish glee when he discusses his photographic nudes, wishing he could do more. "I have no models. I can't get the ones from the art schools because their breasts hang. I can't ask people I know, naturally," he says.
He is a master colourist, as almost every response delves into an analogy from the palette. "Paul Gaugin said that if you use a blue, use a Prussian blue. He meant everything must be utilised to its optimum. Edgar Degas was a master of drawing, he would peep into keyholes to see bathers and then draw them," he avers.
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