Untitled, Still Life

Medium:Ink
Height:12 inch / 30.5 cm
Width:8 inch / 20.3 cm
Dimension:W: 20.3 cm × H: 30.5 cm

An expressive ink drawing depicting a symbolic plant form, rendered with bold strokes, organic rhythm, and primal vitality.

Description

Jogen Chowdhury | Untitled | Ink on Paper | 12 x 8 inches | 2020

This evocative ink drawing presents a stylised plant form imagined through bold, gestural strokes and densely layered black shapes. The composition rises vertically, with leaf-like extensions, branching stems, and pod-like forms unfolding in a rhythmic, almost sculptural manner. Dotted accents within the central mass suggest seeds or organic growth, adding texture and visual contrast to the heavy inked areas. Rather than aiming for botanical realism, the artist transforms the plant into a symbolic presence—suggesting vitality, regeneration, and primal life force. The spontaneous energy of the lines and the stark monochrome palette lend the work a raw immediacy, where nature is perceived not as passive beauty but as a dynamic, living form.

Born on 15 February, 1939 in Faridpur (now in Bangladesh), Jogen Chowdhury’s family moved to Calcutta following the partition.
Chowdhury studied art at the Government College of Art and Crafts, Calcutta, and subsequently at École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts, Paris. A student of Prodosh Das Gupta, Chowdhury worked in the expressionist style of figuration in his early years. He created his own gallery of the grotesque, featuring lewd men with bellies like sacks and women with loose, hanging breasts. The Paris sojourn sharpened his creative thought process, helping in the evolution of his distinctive personal style.

Chowdhury interprets the human form through the x-ray vision of his creativity: attenuated, exaggerated, fragmented, reconfigured, and rephrased. For Chowdhury, the body has to communicate in silence. Often placing his figures against a vacant background, he does not appropriate the specificity of place or environment; instead, he transfers feelings of anguish on to his figures through gestural mark-making. His dense, crosshatched lines simulate body hair and a web of veins takes away the smooth sensuality of the classical body to manifest the textures of life.
Chowdhury believes art in India is neither subsumed in the miniature traditions nor in those of Ajanta, for India is neither a monolith nor a static entity; and that a notion of Indianness should not be fixed into some kind of timeless loop. He has been awarded the Madhya Pradesh government’s Kalidas Samman, and was honoured at the 2nd Havana Biennale. He lives and works in Kolkata and Santiniketan.

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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