The memory of late tribal artist Jangarh Singh Shyam, a celebrated folk artist in India, who had previously showcased alongside western artists in Paris, is now being honoured through an exhibition here.
The works of Shayam and his daughter Japani Shyam is currently on display at the Gallerie Ganesha, which is hosting the exhibition of around 20 works titled "Tribal Tales."
Jangarh Shyam, born in 1962, belonged to the Gond tribe of Madhya Pradesh. As a boy who lived in the jungles of Mandla in Madhya Pradesh before the artist J Swaminathan brought him to Roopankar Museum in Bhopal and introduced him to the modernist mainstream, where he gained almost instant recognition.
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Shyam had also painted the interiors of the Madhya Pradesh Vidhan Sabha and the dome at Bhopal's Bharat Bhavan, one of the most prestigious museums of tribal and contemporary Indian art. He was among the first Gond artists to use paper and canvas for his paintings.
Even after his death in 2001, the Sotheby's auction of South Asian Art in New York in 2010 featured a canvas by him, first for any folk artist from India. In Saffronart's auction of folk and tribal art in 2012, his work was the most expensive priced at Rs 9 lakh.
"From his hometown where he created mural paintings on walls to his last works before his sudden death in 2001, he continued to evolve and his creativity is worthy of the greatest names in contemporary art," says Shobha Bhatia, Director, Gallerie Ganesha.
"His style is characterised by a feeling of intense vibration and the cohesion of his work reveals both the animist culture of Gond tribe and one of the foundations of Indian thought," she says.