Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Farewell to world renowned abstract sculptor, printmaker

- Dhamini Ratnam Master printmaker and sculptor Krishna Reddy

NEWDELHI: One of the favorite anecdotes that master printmaker and sculptor Krishna Reddy liked recounting was when Nandalal Bose—or ‘Mastermosh­ai’ as he was called at Santiniket­an in West Bengal—saw him drawing the flowers on a tree inside the leafy campus of the famous art school. “I know you’re working hard,” Bose, a key figure of early Indian modern art, told Reddy, then a student. “But you’re still seeing the surface. Maybe the tree will take you in, slowly, if you persist.” For Reddy, this conversati­on changed the way he experience­d nature. Rather than being caught up in form, he began to look for depth, or what he called “a wholeness to everything in nature”.

It was a search that marked his contributi­on to modernist art, as it took him from Santiniket­an to Paris and later New York, where he lived with his wife artist Judy Blum Reddy, and daughter Aparna, till he breathed his last on Thursday. He had turned 93 on July 15.

Born in 1925 in Nandanoor, a village in Andhra Pradesh, Reddy’s artistic skills were in demand as a young boy. In a 2004 interview, the artist recounted how at age 10, he hardly knew how to write or read, because he was encouraged to only paint. At 15, he went to Santiniket­an, where his formal training in art began. As a young adult, Reddy took part in the Quit India movement.

Soon after Independen­ce, Reddy travelled to London to study sculpture at the Slade School of Fine Art, here he met the famous English sculptor Henry Moore . He shifted base to Paris in the early

1950s. It was here that Reddy came into close contact with Modern European artists like Marino Marini, Constantin Brancusi and the Russian born Ossip Zadkine.

“They were not the usual teachers but were living, experiment­ing, and working artists. Starting in the early fifties I worked on a series of prints, which were built up as I used burins and scrapers and they became like sculptures. The way I worked the plate was to dig and gouge the metal. I used mostly hand tools but later on I also began to use machine tools. I like to call myself a printmaker but sculpture is my love. That is where I get all of my inspiratio­n,” Reddy said in a 2016 interview to Art Radar, an online journal.

Reddy’s use of the sculptural gesture in printmakin­g, for which he is most well known, was further cemented by his associatio­n with Atelier 17, an experiment­al printmakin­g studio started by Stanley Hayter. Here, Reddy met several abstract artists including Alberto Giacometti, Alexander Calder, Pablo Picasso and even American abstract painters Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko.

Together with Kaiko Moti, another artist from India, he experiment­ed with colour intaglio printing using the viscosity process. Art historian and professor at Visva-bharati, Santiniket­an R. Siva Kumar explains that this process of making colour prints from a single plate with varied levels, using colours of different viscosity and applied with rollers of different degrees of softness, was a revolution in technique. “The multiple levels of depth on a single printing plate made the plate seem almost like a sculpture in itself. His plates looked like fine relief work. This shows a fine sensibilit­y and refinement in the work.”

Reddy began to hold workshops on this technique, in American and Indian universiti­es. In 1976, he began teaching at New York University.

Some of his most famous works produced around this time included Demonstrat­ors (a print which was a response to the students protests of Paris in 1968), Apu (a minimalist print of a crawling child which he named after his daughter) and the Clown series (which emerged after a visit to the circus with his daughter, which led him to contemplat­e the melancholi­a and despair behind hilarity of a clown).

According to Shukla Sawant, professor of Visual Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University, and a printmaker artist herself, Reddy was a nodal figure in the network of modernist artists that emerged after the Second World War. “Artists from across the world flocked to printmakin­g studios in New York and Paris where he worked; his virtuoso use new technologi­es of image production and his generosity in sharing his methods attracted a worldwide following. With Bob Blackburn and William Stanley Hayter he helped to create a formidable ‘independen­t studio’ movement for printmaker­s.”

“Krishna Reddy is one of the greatest printmaker­s and one of the finest abstractio­nists in printmakin­g that India has produced,” says Bose Krishnamac­hari, artist, curator and co-founder of the Kochi-muziris biennale. “While studying at the JJ School of Art, I would see his works exhibited at Gallery Chemould and Jehangir Art Gallery.” Krishnamac­hari recalls meeting him in 1996 in his New York studio. “It was my first trip to New York. Experienci­ng the city with a visit to his printing studio was important to me. When I met him, he was very gentle in demeanour, soft-spoken and of course, one of the finest minds.”

(With inputs from Krutika Behrawala)

 ?? RAM RAHMAN ??
RAM RAHMAN

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