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Landscape

Medium:Ink
Height:14.5 inch / 36.8 cm
Width:11.5 inch / 29.2 cm
Dimension:W: 29.2 cm × H: 36.8 cm

This Landscape by Prokash Karmakar (2005), depicting a lone tree amid an open terrain. Rendered in bold, rhythmic lines, the artwork captures nature’s resilience and meditative beauty with minimal yet powerful detail.

Original price was: ₹125,000.00.Current price is: ₹35,000.00.

Description

Prokash Karmakar | Landscape | Ink on Paper | 10 x 14 inches | 2005

This 2005 Ink on Paper work by Prokash Karmakar captures a stark yet poetic vision of the natural world through his signature bold linework. The composition features a solitary, winding tree rising from an open, textured landscape, evoking resilience amid vast emptiness. Karmakar’s controlled yet expressive strokes create depth and rhythm, with intricate patterns suggesting grass, stones, and distant vegetation. The minimal use of space heightens the sense of quiet contemplation, while the organic flow of lines reflects the artist’s deep connection to nature and his ability to distill its essence into strikingly simple yet evocative forms.

Prokash Karmakar’s art emerged from a contemplation of life, through the prism of personal traumatic experiences intermingled with dark moments in india’s recent history.
He learnt painting at his father, artist-teacher Prahlad Karmakar’s atelier, till the socio-political turmoil of the 1940s and his father’s early death put an end to it.

After his matriculation, Karmakar joined Government College of Arts and Crafts, Calcutta, but quit soon thereafter for reasons of poverty. In between, he designed book covers and worked as an illustrator for his livelihood; he even joined the army but absconded after two years, driven by his desire to paint.
Karmakar learnt the techniques of transparent and opaque watercolours from Kamalaranjan Thakur, a former student of his father, and Dilip Das Gupta. However, it was senior artist Nirode Majumdar—once a student of Abanindranath Tagore—who acquainted Karmakar with artistic and philosophical concepts, techniques, coherence of lines, and the breaking of form. Majumdar had recently returned from France after a stay of twelve years, and shared his rich experience with his protégé.
Karmakar held his first exhibition in 1959 on the railings of Indian Museum, Calcutta. In 1969-70, Karmakar visited France on a fellowship to study art museums, an inspiring exposure for the expressionist artist who, being ‘primarily a colourist’, began to create his figurative monochrome paintings in the 1970s. He won the Lalit Kala Akademi’s national award in 1968, and his work is part of important collections globally.
He passed away on 24 February 2014.


Shipment DetailsThis artwork will be shipped unframed, either in roll form or flat, depending on its requirements—at no additional cost.

If you’d prefer the artwork to arrive ready to hang, please get in touch with us to arrange framing and shipping at applicable charges.

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