Description
Somnath Hore | Untitled | Pen and Ink on Paper | 13.5 x 10 inches | 1992 (Framed & Delivered)
This 1992 pen-and-ink drawing by Somnath Hore is a stark and poignant embodiment of his lifelong commitment to portraying human suffering with empathy and restraint. The frail, possibly laboring figure—drawn with minimal yet expressive lines—evokes the physical and emotional toll of poverty, famine, and political struggle.
Hore’s visual language, developed through decades of socially engaged art, is rooted in his experiences with the Bengal famine and the Tebhaga movement.
In this drawing, anatomy is secondary to emotion; the figure is not rendered with academic precision but with a rhythmic urgency that speaks to lived trauma. The sparseness of the medium—black ink on paper—heightens the immediacy of the image, allowing Hore’s line to carry the weight of history.
This work is part of a broader continuum that includes his Wounds series and Haripura drawings, where the human body becomes a site of endurance and testimony. It is a rare and intimate fragment of his practice, offering collectors a direct encounter with Hore’s ethical and aesthetic vision: art as witness, art as empathy, art as quiet resistance.






