Return from the Market, Figurative, Woodcut on Paper

Medium:Woodcut on Paper

A poignant black-and-white woodcut by Haren Das portraying a rural mother holding her child. With bold lines and deep contrasts, the print evokes tenderness and strength, reflecting the artist’s signature style rooted in village life and human connection.

Original price was: ₹120,000.00.Current price is: ₹68,000.00.

Description

Haren Das | Untitled (Return from the Market) | Woodcut on Paper | 6.8 x 10 inches

This powerful black-and-white woodcut print by Haren Das, dated 1958, captures an intimate scene of domestic life in rural India. A woman is seen standing at the threshold of her home, gently cradling a child in her arms. The sharp contrasts and expressive lines typical of the woodcut technique create a striking visual language, evoking warmth, protection, and maternal care within a humble village setting.

Haren Das, celebrated for his empathetic portrayal of rural life, brings out both emotional depth and visual rhythm in this piece. The interplay of shadows and bold contours emphasizes the texture of thatched roofs, woven walls, and the earthen ground, placing the viewer right in the heart of the rural household. Though simple in form, the work resonates with timeless themes of love, family, and resilience.

Master printmaker Harendra Narayan Das, popularly known as Haren Das, worked almost exclusively in printmaking at a time when oil painting ruled popular consciousness and prints were considered inferior.
Born in Dinajpur in present day Bangladesh on 1 February 1921, Das took a diploma in fine art, with specialization in graphic arts, from the Government College of Arts and Crafts, Calcutta, in 1938. Upon graduation, he joined his alma mater as a lecturer and soon introduced line engraving and etching in the college’s curriculum.

His works included engravings, linocuts, etchings, and lithographs but he especially excelled in woodcuts. Taken from densely engraved or sparsely cut wood blocks, his prints are both technically and artistically superior. A dexterously crafted equilibrium of black and white, at times washed with thin layers of color, detailed renditions of objects and elements, simplicity of composition and petite format characterize his prints. No viable art market existed in India till the 1960s, with few takers for prints in its narrow horizon. Das, however, continued with his passion, exhibiting extensively in India and abroad.
Das’s career flowered at a time of great political and social turbulence in India, especially in his native Bengal. Yet, he turned to rural Bengal’s idyllic life, perhaps as a respite. In chronicling vignettes from countryside in his prints, documenting people’s daily lives, Das recorded a reality of the times that was easily overshadowed by concurrent epochal events. He passed away in Calcutta in 1993.


Shipment DetailsThis artwork will be shipped unframed, either in roll form or flat, depending on its requirements—at no additional cost.

If you’d prefer the artwork to arrive ready to hang, please get in touch with us to arrange framing and shipping at applicable charges.

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Additional information

Dimensions 17.2 × 25.4 cm
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