Amit Ambalal
Sudhir Patwardhan
(b.1949)
He was born in
Pune, Maharashtra, he graduated in
Medicine from the Armed Forces Medical College, Pune in 1972. Patwardhan, a
practicing radiologist, runs a clinic in a modest part of Thane in Mumbai.
He held his first solo exhibition of paintings in Delhi at the famous theatre
personality E.Alkazi's art gallery Art Heritage in 1979. This exhibition was
then held in Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai. Since then he has held more than 15
solo exhibitions in all major galleries, including Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
(1979,1984, 1989, 1994, 1999, 2002), Art Heritage, Delhi (1990), 1994 - Gallery
Chemould (1994), Mumbai, Vadehra Art Gallery, Delhi (1999), Sakshi Gallery,
Banglore and Mumbai (2001, 2002).
Sudhir Patwardhan's works centres around one poetically monumental panorama of
an urban and natural environment. The mostly charcoal drawings on paper were like instant
notations from what happens among working-class people on city streets,
otherwise more or less sketchy studies done from photographs.
Pathwardhan has continued to evolve his figurative style in expressionist
drawings on one hand and large complex oil paintings of town and cityscapes on
the other.
During the period 1986 to 1989 Sudhir Pathwardhan painted landscapes on the spot
in Thane's Pokharan area. He also held five exhibitions of these works in the
area, in schools, a factory shed and even by the roadside. The aim was to share
his experience with the people living and working in Pokharan. From these small
works grew a large painting 'Pokharan' painted in 1992.
Patwardhan's urbanism has a stronger moral edge. Railway and bus commuters,
construction labour, the by now famous solitary man in an Irani restaurant are
his dramatis personae. His narrative has certain sameness, of the anonymous
individual, directly confronted by the challenges
of the city. Patwardhan's figures may be mundane but they are dignified by the
effort that they invest in the everyday acts of survival. The figures are self-contained, and Patwardhan
respects their individuality and inaccessibility.
His vast acrylic canvases may seem like a faithful depiction of the specific
area, an ordinary and quite typical part of Mumbai with its uncomfortable
symbiosis of decent residential buildings and poor ones, of industry and nature.
These, however, exude a strangely bewitching atmosphere -both serene and
disturbing, roughly literal and poetic in a delicate manner, which attain
grandeur.
The urban universe encompasses stage by stage an image of its middle-class
normalcy - anonymous and vague under a muted pollution purplish-pink hue,
another of a threatening stir poisoned by factory affluents and from afar
presided by the lofty spectacle of rich houses whose weight and heavy rigidity
turn ominous, as the next panel relaxes but with a premonition of desolation and
loneliness, and the final one clarifies the mood, as though cleansed by the
redeeming forces of nature and tilled earth. There is stillness and hollowness
there, and yet the tiny figures or people busy themselves amid it all - on the
fringes of it and within it, as an intrinsic part of it and observing-absorbing
it.
The artist now lives and works in Mumbai.