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Artist Profile

Untitled

This 2006 painting is a transmutation of nature and life into an abstract image. Mohammad Eunus is a keen observer of life around him, and in his work he carefully develops layers where the elements from the observable world overlap the effects – textures, markings and shapes – that are left on the surface of the artwork as an outcome of the processes he employs. His poetic vision serves as a unifying force. The surfaces where lines and forms are arrived at not as a premeditation to abstraction but as a resonance of life experienced on a daily basis are his final works of art. There is a multisensory dimension to his paintings as in this piece where segments are created by dividing the canvas horizontally. The sounds and colours that overwhelm the senses are given a second life through textures and the spontaneously developed lines that go beyond the bounds of the yellow midriff of the painting. The vague suggestion of walls and dilapidated buildings and a figure developed through mark-making seem to make the image come alive. 

Artist Art Style

Mohammad Eunus became known for his personalised surface painting where abstract elements mostly defined by textured surface onto which  suggestive shapes and marks commingle. The painter frequently tries out different arrangements of textures, dots, marks and shapes to arrive at various different compositions to address various different states of mind. The artist feels that drawings are a process of visualizing thoughts, giving shape to one’s inner world. And what makes the daily routine of a painter interesting is the accidents that separate one painting from another creating the possibility of uniqueness. The tradition of abstraction in Bangladesh has long been beholden to American Abstract Expressionism and the geometric composition linked to Parisian avant garde. Eunus made it a point to bring into the painterly space a flurry of emotional and actual experiences to meddle with the very idea of pure abstraction. His judicious yet bold insertion of a set of vague references to city walls and dilapidated buildings makes his visual proposition emotionally fraught.  

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