Page 55 - TheArtsTrust Krishen Khanna
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100 YE ARS OF KRISHEN KHANNA









































 sounds of a marching band. Although their bright uniforms, gleaming brass,
 and illuminated faces set a carnival-like tone—the bandwallas also bear
 fatigue behind the display. The artist does not caricature these performers.
 He approaches them with a blend of humour and respect. Often with aching
 bodies and tired souls, these men perform without notice, repeating the same
 melodies night after night for strangers’ pleasure. Their vivid attire echoes the
 imperial military show and mocks the very power they once represented. The
 Bandwalla, above all, has become an iconic Khanna signature, something he
 explores to this day.
 Khanna, through his life and work, has been an observer-interlocutor
 in presenting India in all its forms. Sympathetic but distanced, involved
 but balanced, he enables his characters to surface through visual dialogue.
 With repeating motifs in his oeuvre that bear notes of humanity and grace,
 the bandwallas, the fruit sellers, the soldiers, the scribes, the saints and the
 sinners—and every manner of everyday human one encounters—offer a
 vibrant spectacle. The true genius of Krishen Khanna lies in his reinvention,
 as much of these characters as of himself. Now, at 100 years, the exceptional
 master still retains a sense of discovery, and has given Modern Indian Art an
 idiom that will never be forgotten.
 ~ Anandita Bhardwaj




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