A quiet yet powerful portrait sketch, this artwork captures the profile of a woman adorned with a headscarf and feather-like ornament. Rendered with confident, minimal lines, the drawing reveals the artist’s ability to express character and emotion through simplicity. The subject’s thoughtful gaze and dignified presence create an intimate connection, inviting viewers to imagine her story beyond the paper.
Bijan Choudhury | Untitled | Ink on Paper | 10 x 13 inches | 2010
This evocative ink-on-paper sketch by Bijan Choudhury demonstrates the artist’s mastery of line and observation. With only a few deliberate strokes, he constructs a compelling portrait of a woman seen in profile, her features defined with remarkable clarity and personality. The headscarf and decorative feather detail add a sense of cultural identity and individuality, while the simplicity of the composition allows the viewer to focus entirely on her expression.
The artwork possesses an unfinished, spontaneous quality that highlights the immediacy of the artist’s hand. Rather than relying on elaborate shading or detail, Choudhury uses fluid contours and expressive lines to capture the essence of the subject. The result is a portrait that feels both intimate and timeless, celebrating the beauty of everyday people and the stories they carry.
Perfect for collectors who appreciate figurative art, sketches, and works that reveal the artist’s creative process, this drawing offers a rare glimpse into the power of simplicity. Its understated elegance makes it a meaningful addition to both contemporary and traditional art collections.
Artist Bijan Choudhury was born in Faridpur in 1931. He was one of the early practitioners of contemporary art in Bengal. Every serious workshop would find him involved in an exchange of thoughts and idioms of visual and literary expressions.Born to journalist Kunjabehari Chowdhury, Bijan Chowdhury was raised in an atmosphere steeped in music, painting and drama. Bijan Choudhury has worked on the imagery of Bengali poetry as it has evolved since its earliest days to the present, covering almost more than four centuries of poetical development.
His paintings have narrative elements but are in no way illustrative. He is here both as a composer and interpreter. His archetypal imagery and symbolism are not explicit as in the recent Indian variety of Surrealism and fantastic art. He has always avoided the sensational and the fearful aspects of art. He has searched for significant visual forms that have behind them the range and scope of Human Art since the earliest cave dwelling days.
Since his early days at Kolkata’s Govt College of Art and Craft he was deeply involved in Marxist politics. This led to his being expelled before completing his diploma but strengthened his bond with Dhaka as it prompted him to graduate from their Govt Institute of Arts. And till his last breath he considered Bangladesh to be his own.
Artist Bijan Chowdhury passed away in 2012.
Education
1945-49: GCAC, Kolkata; 1953: Grad., Govt. Institute of Arts, Dhaka.
Exhibitions
1959 Group show, Society of Contemporary Artists, Calcutta.
1960 Group show, Society of Contemporary Artists, Calcutta.
1960 Bangla Sanskriti Sammelan, Calcutta and Bombay.
1962 Solo show at Arts and Prints Gallery, Calcutta.
1963 Solo show at Arts and Prints Gallery, Calcutta.
1963 Solo Exhibition at Patna.
1964 Eight Painters from Calcutta, AIFACS Gallery, New Delhi.
1964 Calcutta Painters group show, Calcutta.
1965 Calcutta Painters group show, Calcutta.
1966 Show in honour of Giacometti, Industry House, Calcutta.
1968 Exhibition with Paritosh Sen, Pravas Sen, Sarbari Roy Chowdhury, Mahim Rudra, Calcutta.
1969 West Bengal Artists, sponsored by Srinantwu, Bombay.
1974 Exhibition at Birla Academy of Art & Culture, Calcutta.
1974 Calcutta Painters group show, Birla Academy of Art & Culture, Calcutta.
1975 Calcutta Painters group show, Sridharani Art Gallery, New Delhi.
1975 Participated in the Third Triennale, New Delhi.
1977 Retrospective, Allai
Awards
1963 Academy of Fine Arts Award, Calcutta.
1978 Rabindra Bharati Award, Calcutta.
1978 Documentary coloured film entitled `Bijan`, made by Film Australia, Film Division of Govt. of Australia.
1995 `Abanindra Puroshkar`, Govt. of West Bengal, Calcutta.
1996 : He also received William Carey Award.
2004: Doctor of Literature, RBU
Shipment DetailsThis artwork will be shipped unframed, either in roll form or flat, depending on its requirements—at no additional cost.
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