HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesHow artist Benode Behari Mukherjee saw Rabindranath Tagore's Santiniketan

How artist Benode Behari Mukherjee saw Rabindranath Tagore's Santiniketan

A 45-feet scroll, painted by artist Benode Behari Mukherjee as a young man, while he still had vision in one eye, portrays Rabindranath Tagore’s campus as a lonely, somewhat wild land, amid the miniature canyon-like Khoai terrain of Bengal.

June 12, 2023 / 10:51 IST
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Panels from the newly discovered scroll 'Scenes from Santiniketan', 1924.
Panels from the newly discovered scroll 'Scenes from Santiniketan', 1924.

A century-old, 44.6-plus-feet scroll painting inscribed 1924 by the artist Benode Behari Mukherjee, who was filmmaker Satyajit Ray’s teacher at Santiniketan, is on exhibition before the public for the first time. Gallerist and archivist Rakesh Sahni, who runs Gallery Rasa in Kolkata, acquired the scroll about five years ago. Mukherjee had given it or sold it to the painter Sudhir Khastagir, who was also a student at Kala Bhavan, Santiniketan, under Nandalal Bose. The scroll is made on “thin paper”, said Sahni, joined together to create this long work. The join marks are visible as vertical lines on the scroll. “If it was thicker paper, it would have probably creased, like even chart paper does,” Sahni said on the phone. “It is luck that it was such thin paper. But this apart, the scroll took months of meticulous restoration before we could even think of showing it.”

Displayed in a very long and slender rectangular case designed specifically for the scroll, ‘Scenes from Shantiniketan’ offers a cinematic view of the landscape and seasons of Santiniketan—a rural, and at the time, wooded and slightly wild quarter that became the home for Rabindranath Tagore’s university-school complex founded in 1921. I say cinematic rather than panoramic because the work changes perspective. At the start is a ground-level view featuring the lower trunks and vine-like hanging roots of a thicket of trees with a small hunched figure seated in the cave-like canopy. The work then moves to whole trees in a wooded area, as if you are walking amid them and looking up in wonder; and then to an overhead, bird’s view of paddy fields with small settlements of huts adjacent to them and foot-worn pathways leading away. The impression is of a camera moving across the landscape, on the ground and travelling up and down, zooming in and out to capture the setting in detail and overview. Mukherjee uses space as a transitioning device to change perspective. The effect is once again cinematic: his use of space is similar to the use of editing cuts in cinema to transition from one sequence or scene to another. In Chinese scrolls, mist is used as a transitioning device, curator R Sivakumar’s text notes.

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A segment from the opening section of the scroll, Scenes from Santiniketan. Note the hunched figure on the steps surrounded by the canopy of the trees.

There is, furthermore, a change of seasons along the scroll. We start in what feels like late winter or what passes for spring in Bengal with leaves on the ground. Then, summer marked by the unmistakeable silhouette of a bulbul, then the monsoon where the mostly black and muted red work takes on a verdant green for the paddy that is readying for harvest. By the time we near the end of the scroll, it is what looks like the beginning of winter, when nature starts to retreat, in the bare, leafless, tablet-like Khoai terrain of Birbhum.