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Artist Profile

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Drawings constitute an important part of Quamrul Hassan’s oeuvre. This pen sketch done in 1973 in a newly independent Bangladesh, is his take on women and their contributions in society. The artist illustrates all the facets of women’s involvement in activities ranging from household chores to their involvement in the local economy. Women raise children and also play an important central role in both formal and informal economy as they are involved in cutting and thrashing paddy, collecting water and more, yet in the corridors of power their presence is negligible, which make them a minority in need of empowerment. The sketch is a homage to women living in this delta whose contribution cannot be overemphasized. 

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Women are a recurring theme in Quamrul Hassan’s drawings and paintings. In this 1973 sketch he once again went back to his favourite subject. With the depiction of two women – one complete and the other not fully realized – the artist seems to be trying out different postures in order to prepare for big-format paintings. This piece consists of two facing pages out of a sketch book. As for the subject matter explored, to visibilize women is one important task in this part of the world. Through his paintings, prints and drawings, Quamrul had successfully created opportunities to make women appear in many different roles, but mostly as representatives of the people in the Bengal delta. He used to infuse the idea of Bengal with the age-old sense of beauty and personhood, in his hand women come off as individuals whose lives are being celebrated and the natural beauty is apotheosized. 

Art Style

Quamrul Hassan is famous for his radical style of art where he successfully melded rural heritage with Pacassoesque dehumanization technique to arrive at his own imageries. His political stance fed his artistic philosophy and made him one of those rare breeds who can simultaneously negotiate beauty and criticality. Quamrul is responsible for the political turn in art in the early 1970s, when in the newly independent country society was at a crossroads. He was part of the struggle for an independent Bangladesh and his take on the rise of an isolated bourgeois class in the newly-independent country inspired him to take up drawing and wood engraving to aim his critique at the new power structure. However, as an artist he made his name for some of the abiding masterpieces that provide a glimpse into the rural life in Bengal. 

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