Prafulla Dahanukar Explained

Prafulla Dilip Dahanukar
Birth Name:Prafulla Subrai Joshi
Birth Date:1 January 1934
Birth Place:Goa, Portuguese India
Death Place:Mumbai, India
Nationality:Indian
Training:Sir J. J. School of Art
Movement:Progressive Arts Movement
Awards:Sir J. J. School of Arts Gold Medalist 1955, The Bombay Art Society Silver Medal in 1955
Spouse:Dilip Dahanukar
Children:Gauri Mehta, Gopika Dahanukar

Prafulla Dahanukar (1934 – 2014) was an Indian painter, a leader in modern Indian art who also helped and influenced many young artists in India.[1] [2] [3]

Biography

Prafulla Dahanukar was born Prafulla Joshi in Bandora, Goa to Subrai Anant Joshi and singer Kesarbai Bandodkar,[4] and she grew up in Mumbai. She studied Fine Art at the Sir J.J. School of Art in Mumbai and graduated with a Gold Medal in 1955.[5] [6] She had a studio in the seminal Bulabhai Desai Institute in Mumbai and shared it with V. S. Gaitonde, becoming part of the Progressive Artists' Group from 1956 to 1960. The Institute was filled with luminaries who transformed the art and culture scene in India. The Government of France awarded her a scholarship to study fine art in Paris in 1961.

Dahanukar served the cause of art and painting for all her life. She was a committee member of the Lalit Kala Akademi in New Delhi from 1974 to 1979, and the President of Bombay Art Society for 11 years from 1993 to 1998 and from 2010 till her death in 2014. She was a trustee of the Jehangir Art Gallery (for over 40 years) and committee member of Kala Academy in Goa (for over 30 years). She was also the President of the Art Society of India and the Chairperson of The Artists' Centre, Mumbai. She was also the Founder president of India Art Festival, an only art fair then in Mumbai started in 2010-11.

Prafulla Dahanukar was one of the founder members of Sangit Kala Kendra with Aditya Birla, its President for 3 years and continued to work on its committee for over 30 years. She was the committee member of the Music Forum. She was on the Board of Trustees of the Indian National Theatre for the last 4 years. Besides the work for the artists, she was involved as the main trustee for last 30 years of an orphanage called Bal Anandgram in Lonavala. She had two daughters (Gauri Mehta and Gopika Dahanukar) and five grandchildren (Ritam Mehta, Kamakshi Kaarthikeyan, Anam Mehta, Shantala Mehta and Keshava Kaarthikeyan).

Work

Prafulla Dahanukar painted abstract landscapes in generally one vivid and dominant color, with myriad shades and subtlety. She called her paintings "Eternal Space" as she believed that space is unending and couldn't be destroyed.

Exhibitions and museum collections

She had solo exhibitions regularly from 1956. While in Paris she held an exhibition of her paintings in 1961 and has since then participated in many international exhibitions in England, Hungary, Switzerland, Germany, Australia, Japan, Portugal, Iceland and France. She has exhibited solo 3 times in London, the first of which was sponsored by the High Commission of India in 1978. Citibank sponsored her show in 2006 in Ardean Gallery in Cork Street, London. In India she has had several individual shows in Mumbai, Delhi, Calcutta, and Chennai. Barclays Bank recently in November 2008 sponsored her exhibition in Dubai which was opened by the famous painter M.F. Husain. On completion of fifty years of her career as a painter, she was honored by the Jehangir Art Gallery which sponsored a Retrospective show of her career paintings. Prafulla's paintings have been offered on Sotheby's and Osean art auctions.

Prafulla used her artistic talent in creating murals in ceramic, wood and glass. These murals adorn prominent buildings in Mumbai, Pilani, Kolkata and Muscat (Oman).

Her paintings are in the collections of the National Gallery of Modern Art and Lalit Kala Academy in New Delhi, the Central Museum in Nagpur, the Prince of Wales Museum in Mumbai, and many institutional and private collections in India and overseas.

Prafulla Dahanukar Art Foundation

The Prafulla Dahanukar Art Foundation (PDAF) was started by Dilip Dahanukar, in memory of his wife Prafulla Dahanukar. The PDAF is a unique art foundation, sponsored initially by the leading artists of India sending in a painting each, in memory of Prafulla, with the funds from sale of these paintings launching this non-profit organization, formed by artists, for artists.

PDAF has grown into one of the largest awarders of fellowships to emerging artists all over India. The foundation is working to support and provide a platform for the community of artists, so that new, young artists get visibility and patronage for their art, and senior artists can guide them through their initial years of struggle.

In 2014, the PDAF launched a new initiative, the Emerging Artist Reward Scheme, which is a contest for artists registered with the PDAF. Through this, the PDAF will give out Gold, Silver, and Bronze awards to artists at the state level and at the all-India level, across six different categories of art i.e.; Painting, Sculpture, Ceramics, Printmaking, Installation and Photography. The overall winners of the contest will win a sponsored solo show at a leading art gallery in Mumbai.

Awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Nehru Centre Art Gallery Organises the Millennium Show, a Century of Art from Maharashtra . . 2000 . Mumbai . en . Exhibition catalog . 51264805 . Google Books.
  2. News: Baria . Zeenia . 14 July 2014 . An ode to a master . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20220922132227/https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/life-style/spotlight/an-ode-to-a-master/articleshow/38362438.cms . 22 September 2022 . 24 September 2014 . The Times of India.
  3. News: Murdeshwar . Sheila . November 2008 . 'Eternal Space' in Her Heart Prafulla Dahanukar . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110710125354/http://www.dignityfoundation.com/pdf/DD-Nov-08/Prafulla-Dahanukar.pdf . 10 July 2011 . Dignity Dialogue . 6–7.
  4. Web site: Gehi . Reema . 2 March 2014 . Art community bids goodbye to Dahanukar . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240625002834/https://mumbaimirror.indiatimes.com/mumbai/other/art-community-bids-goodbye-to-dahanukar/articleshow/31235345.cms . 25 June 2024 . 24 June 2024 . . en.
  5. Web site: Pillai . Akshaya G. . 12 January 2023 . Prafulla Dahanukar: An Iconic Feminist In The History of Women In Art #IndianWomenInHistory . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240310031504/https://feminisminindia.com/2023/01/12/prafulla-dahanukar-an-iconic-feminist-in-the-history-of-women-in-art-indianwomeninhistory/ . 10 March 2024 . 24 June 2024 . Feminism in India . en-GB.
  6. Web site: Artist Profile - Prafulla Dahanukar . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240206124418/http://goaartgallery.com/prafulla_dahanukar.htm . 6 February 2024 . 24 June 2024 . Goa Art Gallery.
  7. Web site: Profile of Prafulla Dahanukar . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240625003736/https://www.indiaart.com/Artists/Prafulla-Dahanukar/Profile_of_Prafulla_Dahanukar.asp . 25 June 2024 . 24 June 2024 . Indiaart.com.