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Mukul Chandra Dey

Mukul Chandra Dey

Brief info

INDIA’S FIRST CREATIVELY TRAINED PRINTMAKER AND PIONEER OF DRY POINT ETCHING IN THE COUNTRY, MUKUL CHANDRA DEY WAS BORN ON 23 JULY 1895 IN SRIDHARKHOLA, BENGAL.

He joined Santiniketan’s Brahmacharya Ashram school at the age of eleven and trained in art under the Tagore family stalwarts, becoming a close associate of Abanindranath Tagore.

He was introduced to printmaking by W. W. Pearson. In 1916, he travelled with Rabindranath Tagore to Japan and studied Japanese painting. He then went to Chicago to study etching and became the first Indian to be elected a member of Chicago Society of Etchers. In 1920, he went to London to study at Slade School of Fine Art and the Royal College of Art. Choosing to root his work in the Orientalist matrix, Dey travelled extensively within India to observe people and architecture. Subjects from mythology engraved in dry point and hand coloured to add a sense of immediacy became his forte. He also executed portraits of contemporary luminaries.

In 1928, Dey became the first Indian principal of the Government School of Art, Calcutta, and actively promoted printmaking. He published books on his works, including My Pilgrimages to Ajanta and Bagh (1925) and My Reminiscences (1938). His autobiography, Amar Kotha, was published posthumously in 1995. He served as curator of the National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi, from 1956-58, and was elected fellow of the Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi, in 1987. He passed away on 1 March 1989 in Calcutta.

Projects by Mukul Chandra Dey

Discription about the Art…..

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