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Bengal to Baker Street in 80 Paintings

4 Extra Debut. Jain Campion visits a unique London collection of work by the pioneering modern Indian painter Jamini Roy. From 2014.

There was a time when British art critics declared that there was no such thing as fine art in India and that its sculptures and paintings were hideous and worthless. Mukti Jain Campion discovers the story of pioneering Calcutta painter Jamini Roy (1887 - 1972), who set out to challenge such colonial views and became one of the most successful fathers of Indian modern art.

In an apartment off London's Baker Street, Nirmalya Kumar, a Calcutta-born business professor, has amassed a unique collection which traces the evolution of Jamini Roy as an artist. It shows how Roy developed a distinctive "flat" style inspired by traditional village scroll painters - and then honed it over a lifetime.

Roy was keen that his art should be cheap and accessible and his paintings soon became immensely popular amongst ordinary Bengalis but also gained an international following.

Contributors include:
Professor Nirmalya Kumar, collector of Jamini Roy's paintings
Richard Blurton, curator of South Asian Art at the British Museum,
Partha Mitter Emeritus Professor of Art History, University of Sussex
Sona Datta, art historian and curator and author of book on Jamini Roy "Urban Patua".
Artist Sir Howard Hodgkin

Producer: Mukti Jain Campion
A Culture Wise production

First broadcast on Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4 in 2014.

30 minutes

Last on

Thu 28 Jan 2021 02:30

Broadcasts

  • Thu 6 Mar 2014 11:30
  • Wed 27 Jan 2021 14:30
  • Thu 28 Jan 2021 02:30