1954
This painting of mountain peaks surrounded by clouds attests to Nandalal Bose’s enduring interest in Japanese painting techniques, which he learned from Japanese artists visiting the Government School of Art in Calcutta between 1905 and 1907. The cloud and mountain forms take shape through two techniques foreign to Indian painting traditions: diluting the ink, which creates washes of gray like those at the upper right, and modulating the pressure of the brush to create the saturated tones and drier textures of the rock face.
21.6 x 31.1 cm (8 1/2 x 12 1/4 in.)
Nandalal Bose, Santiniketan, West Bengal, India, (-1966) by inheritance; to his son, Biswarup Bose, Santiniketan, West Bengal, India (1966-1969 to 1971) gift; to Supratik Bose, grandson of Nandalal Bose, Cambridge, MA, (between 1969 and 1971-2010) gift; to the Harvard Art Museums.
Black ink on Asian paper
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20th centuryIndianBlack ink with traces of charcoal on Asian paper
20th centuryIndianBlack ink with traces of charcoal on Asian paper
20th centuryIndianBlack ink on Asian paper
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20th centuryIndianBlack ink on Asian paper
20th centuryIndianBlack ink with traces of charcoal on Asian paper
20th centuryIndian