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Suburbia Painting

Prabha Shah

India

Painting, Oil on Canvas

Size: 40 W x 40 H x 4 D in

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About The Artwork

Unpainted cement surfaces, iron and steel, and maybe asbestos, too. All add up to heaped blocks of suburban flats that are a recurrent subject to Prabha. But the hide- and-seek orange that she usually reserves for edges of tiled roof creeps into this impersonal dystopia. The whole surface is treated in strips – at the centre, and to its left, bottom and right. The sky can be peeled off, almost. A not-so-common texture for the painter in not-so-common, rectangular colour fields.

Details & Dimensions

Painting:Oil on Canvas

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:40 W x 40 H x 4 D in

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In a Language of her Own Prabha Shah can claim to have created her own language. Deprived of the gift of hearing, she never quite formed a comprehensive textual vocabulary. Her verbal expressions are laboured. But after almost five decades of unwavering practice in painting, she has forged her own patois within the meta-language of visuals. The language her brush speaks today follows the universal grammar of stones, mortar, glass and water – motifs that keep coming back into her work. Yet, the language is so distinctively toned that it is recognisably her own. Painting, or rather the urge to express through painting, came out as a life force from within Prabha. Her family members recall how a little-understood young girl, constantly at odds with the world, calmed down all of a sudden when she discovered the world of painting. After initial training in Jaipur, she started depicting the houses, alleys, arches, doors, animals and people of Rajasthan. The colours and variety of visages in Udaipur, where she moved to, greatly influenced her. When the family shifted to the national capital, the humans and animals thinned out and heaped blocks of Delhi suburbia came to dominate. There was one constant through this shifting oeuvre: nature – its plants, stones and water – always remained within the frame. In Delhi, she got a corner of an atelier at the Triveni Kala Sangam and started interacting more with other artists. Her depictions began to evolve. She started looking more within the structures and colours she wanted to paint with a sense of balance that was still evolving. She doesn’t seem to be a subscriber of the concept of ‘significant form’, a Modernist obsession with the depiction of the essence of a figure rather than the figure itself. Yet, like with some card-carrying Modernists, the surety of physical laws has become less important than the internal logic of Prabha’s compositions. Vivid, primary colours have gone into corners and dabs, and layered ones have claimed more space on her palette. These new colours are often not born of two primary tones, but are mixes of three, four or five colour tubes. Textures have gained more prominence, too. Whereas earlier she at times experimented with using random texts to form textures, she used the look of granite cross-sections or strewn rubble to guide the viewer’s gaze. Rather than just balancing frames, with intuitively placed swathes and lines, she started conveying depth of field.

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