Untitled, Cow

Medium:Brush
Height:6.5 inch / 16.5 cm
Width:7.5 inch / 19.1 cm
Dimension:W: 19.1 cm × H: 16.5 cm

A powerful brush-on-paper work by Somnath Hore, depicting a solitary bovine with raw, expressive strokes that convey vulnerability, endurance, and quiet dignity.

Description

Somnath Hore | Untitled | Brush on Paper | 7.5 x 6.5 inches | 1977

This untitled brush-and-ink work on paper by Somnath Hore presents a stark and deeply moving portrayal of an animal form, rendered with the same empathy and moral gravity that define his human figures. The solitary bovine stands in profile, its body constructed through layered washes of black and gray that alternate between solidity and dissolution. Hore’s handling of the brush is economical yet intensely expressive: broad, rough strokes define the torso, while darker accents around the head, legs, and hooves lend the creature a sense of weight and quiet endurance. Subtle linear marks along the body suggest skeletal structure, evoking vulnerability and physical strain rather than naturalistic detail. Set against an empty, unarticulated background, the animal appears isolated and exposed, transforming a humble rural subject into a powerful symbol of suffering, survival, and silent resilience. In this work, Hore extends his humanist vision to the animal world, using restraint and raw gesture to express compassion and existential presence with remarkable force.

Somnath hore was the quintessential bengal artist deeply affected by the cataclysms that changed its history, such as the 1943 famine. a man-made crisis resulting in the death of two-three million people and the 1946 tebhaga peasant uprising.
A multifaceted artist who spent a lifetime exploring human suffering through his sketches, prints and sculptures, Somnath Hore was born in Chittagong in present-day Bangladesh in 1921.
Studying briefly at Government School of Art, Calcutta, in the mid-1940s, Hore trained under Zainul Abedin, and, later, under printmaker Saifuddin Ahmed. A participatory practice with fellow artists like Chittaprosad led to his intellectual growth. Hore’s early sketches were published in Janayuddha and People’s War, publications of the Communist Party; like many young men in the 1940s, Hore too joined the political party though he drifted away from it later.

Hore chose a distinctly formal, Western style of artmaking, distinguished by its strong linear quality, and guided by humanist concerns that foregrounded the indigent grappling with issues of survival. Distilled into iconic heads and emaciated bodies, his act of recovering the erased re-inscribed them into public memory. The anguished human form was reflected in Hore’s figuration through bold, minimal strokes enhanced by rough surfaces, slits and holes.
Over a thirty-year teaching career, Hore set up the printmaking department of Delhi Polytechnic in 1958. He joined Kala Bhavana, Santiniketan, as head of its printmaking department in 1968, where his own practice received a boost under the guidance of Ramkinkar Baij and Benodebehari Mukherjee.


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