
From Partition to today, Krishen Khanna's work tells the story of a changing nation
For the well-known artist Krishen Khanna, who turns 100 today, the most haunting memories are of Partition. Khanna was working at a printing press in Lahore when the rumblings of Partition, and of Independence, began. He depicts this vividly in his work, Refugee Train Late 16 hrs (1947), where a group of men and women can be seen tightly packed together while waiting for the train that can take them across the border. A couple can be seen embracing each other fervently, for they do not know if they will meet again. The artist's memories of Partition are as if it has just happened: 'It was during the crucial months…we trooped out in two cars and came straight to Shimla where the education department [his father was deputy director of education with the government] was then going to be founded. All the records had to be garnered and brought. The ones that didn't come, they had to be made up again through memory… But anyway, I was there, and I was looking out for a job. I couldn't go back…The evenings in Lahore would be penetrated by howling cries, as area after area would be set afire and it still haunts me and holds me immobile.'
Khanna's memories of Lahore remain vivid, even today. About a work like Maclagan Road (1990), for instance, he states, 'I spent several years of my childhood on Maclagan Road which was like a microcosm of Lahore. On this modest road lived professors and teachers of considerable distinction as well as my father who taught at the Government College. There was Dr Gurbax Rai, a homeopath who healed even the passerby. He actively participated in the freedom struggle and went to jail several times. During those difficult days, his wife would sell fruit preserves. As a refugee in Delhi he continued to live with the same dignity and simplicity. It was fantastic how this small stretch of road had people of every faith and profession, and belonging to different strata of society, all living in peace and amity.'
The artist's family shifted to India, and to earn a living, Khanna arrived in Bombay in 1948 where he joined Grindlays Bank. It was then that he came across the artists who formed the famed Progressive Artists' Group and were at the forefront of modernism. He met like-minded artists like M F Husain and S H Raza, and then he exhibited a painting which they all liked at the Bombay Art Society. The painting was called News of Gandhiji's Death (1948) and featured people reading newspapers under a light. The artist says, 'I was in Delhi when Gandhi ji was assassinated and I was going to Connaught Place and [there were] all these little islands with lights and people were gathered under the lights reading newspapers. That left an image in my mind. So I worked on that and did this painting.' Artists in the Progressive Group met frequently, had fervent discussions late into the night and supported and analysed each other's works.
There came a time when Khanna wanted to leave his banking job and paint full time. Supported by his wife, he was to give it up entirely in 1961. There was no looking back after that. His vast artistic resources drove him to make works which threw the spotlight on the marginalised and the ignored during the heady early years of Independence. In paintings like Rear View (1991), the plight of migrant workers huddled in trucks — like bundles of objects and painted in monotones — drew attention to their unchanging situation despite Independence.
Khanna's depiction of the bandwallas over the years expressed contradictions in the social situation in a vivid manner. The bandwallas in their bright but ill-fitting costumes and their straggly appearance bring light to the lives of others while remaining in a situation of constant deprivation themselves. Over the years, Khanna's bandwallas sensuously depicted the bodily stances and postures of those on the fringes of society, as well as their immense and heroic struggle to overcome their situation.
The retelling of the lives of many came together in his murals, the most well-known of which is the magnificent work, The Great Procession, made in the dome at the ITC Maurya, New Delhi in the 1970s. Presented with sardonic wit, the mural offers glimpses of India with all its contradictions and ironies: A woman scratches her ear in a temple, amid devotees; a man picks pockets outside a mosque; a tiger hides in a mountain cave to pounce on grazing goats; the merry bandwallas play in a corner while barbers and street performers ply their trade. There are humorous quotations as well, and author Khushwant Singh serves tea in a dhaba where the customers include Mulk Raj Anand and the artist himself. These vignettes of a life lived to its fullest are revealed like a procession in this mural of epic proportions.
Khanna's moving work, The Last Bite (2005), speaks for itself. It stands out for its reflection of the camaraderie and debates he shared with other artists, as well as the times that they foresaw. In this painting, Husain is central as a prominent member of the Progressive Artists' Group. He is flanked on the left by Tyeb Mehta, F N Souza and Bhanu Athaiya — the only woman member, who later became important as the costume designer for Richard Attenborough's Gandhi (1982). The painting has other members of the artist fraternity, like Akbar Padamsee who seems to be addressing Bhupen Khakhar, who in turn appears to be looking out of the frame as if engaging with the common man. On Khanna's right is the famed V S Gaitonde addressing Jeram Patel, as the painter Jogen Chowdhury looks out of the frame. Manjit Bawa, Raza and J Swaminathan complete the group. As the last man standing, Khanna feels bereft of his friends and contemporaries, but his work and life provide sustenance, not just to himself, but to what he cherishes the most: The ordinary man on the street.
The writer is an art historian and independent curator based in New Delhi
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Indian Express
3 days ago
- Indian Express
Bollywood icon got ‘married' at 13 to man three decades her senior, watched her infant daughter die, converted to Islam after seeing dreams
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'My mother would put pots and pans on the stove, and pretend to cook, hoping that we would fall asleep first,' she said in an interview with the BBC, with a smile on her face. She would soon become the sole breadwinner of the family, before she'd even hit adulthood. She was always in a vulnerable position, which made her a target for men who'd exploit her. Also read – Patriarch of iconic Bollywood family abandoned his son, forced second family to live in secrecy for decades, went blind in his final days When she first showed signs of being interested in dance as an art form, her mother thought that she was mentally unwell. A young Saroj would dance along with her own shadow for company, and make expressions with her face, much to her parents' concern. 'My mother took me to the doctor. He said, 'Nothing is wrong with her. She wants to dance, let her dance',' she told the BBC in a 2000 interview. 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I met my husband, fell in love, and converted. I love Islam. I myself went to a mosque and changed my religion and became a Muslim. People have asked me if I was forced. And I told them that I lost a baby girl, and she would come to me in my dreams, and call for me from inside a mosque…' she said in a separate interview with DD. Also read – Mughal-E-Azam actor worked in over 500 films, but lived in a house without electricity, could never afford a car Saroj said that she never hid any details about the identity of her children's father from them. She told them that she wouldn't marry Khan if they were opposed to the idea, but also stressed that they would live life feeling illegitimate if she didn't marry him. 'My second husband never let my children feel like outsiders, or like he wasn't their father. They both loved him very much, and would tell Kuku, who was four at the time, that he is her father,' she told DD. Saroj Khan died in 2o2o, in the early phase of the pandemic. The entire film industry paid tribute to her for her contributions to Hindi cinema. Her work has become an integral part of Hindi films, and will continue to live on and inspire future generations. She choreographed multiple generations of actors, including Sridevi, Madhuri Dixit, Shah Rukh Khan, Govinds, Salman Khan, Katrina Kaif, Raveena Tandon and many others.


Time of India
3 days ago
- Time of India
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With the unofficial ban on dubbing into Kannada since the '60s, Bengaluru had developed pockets where Tamil and Hindi films thrived in their original, especially in the former Cantonment areas. These pockets grew in the '90s, with Kannada films increasingly depending on remakes. With migration, Telugu films joined the party and suddenly, Bengaluru was the only city with films in five different languages, including English, releasing every week. The new century The turn of the century saw the arrival of three actors who would become superstars: Sudeep, Darshan, andPuneeth Rajkumar. Their stardom (after the untimely death of Puneeth) in Bengaluru and the rest of Karnataka continues to this day. Kannada actresses, including Ramya, Rakshita, and Radhika, were also part of this new generation. In 2003, Bengaluru got its first taste of multiplex cinema. Signalling the growth of the city, the first 'multiscreen theatres' came up in Marathahalli rather than the more traditional cinema hubs of KG Road and MG Road. It was followed by the now-standard multiplex screens in Koramangala. This decade saw the steady decline of single-screen theatres in Bengaluru. In the 1990s, there were nearly 200 single screens in the city. Despite the rapid growth of the city since then, no new single screen was added. In September 2014, the 23rd multiplex in Bengaluru with eight screens came up, taking the total number of multiplex screens to 113. The number of single screens had come down to 112 (a few more had ceased operations but still had standing structures). The pendulum had swung. Former Karnataka Film Chamber of Commerce president and exhibitor, KV Chandrashekar, said, 'Today, in 2025, the number of single screens in the city has reduced to 68 while 58 multiplexes with a combined 285 screens have far overtaken them.' For Karnataka, the numbers are 333 and 458, respectively. Multiplexes also helped languages with smaller demographics to screen films in Bengaluru. Malayalam, Bengali, Gujarati, and Marathi films began to be regularly screened in the city. Large-scale migration helped Bhojpuri films to be screened in a few single screens as well. However, the earlier 'MG Road films' (English and Hindi) completely abandoned single screens and became 'multiplex-only' films. Single screens could be filled only by Kannada films with big stars and the bigbudget films from Telugu and Tamil. The big spurt The late 2010s saw a major explosion of filmmaking in Bengaluru, with the Kannada film industry experiencing an unprecedented spurt in production. From an industry that was churning out around 70–75 films a year, the annual releases breached 200 within the next ten years. This was in no small measure due to the success of Mungaru Male (2006), which set many records, including becoming the first Indian film to run in a multiplex for a full year. The film literally introduced hundreds of new directors, actors, and producers to the industry. The shift from celluloid to digital filming was another factor which aided this rapid growth. Ganesh, Duniya Vijay, Yash, and Rakshit Shetty were some of the stars who emerged during this period. The 2010s and '20s saw great experimentation as the film industry in Bengaluru tried to crack the multiplex code, which seemed to favour only high-budget films. The way people watched films has also changed. Veteran director and producer SV Rajendra Singh Babu said, 'In the '80s, Rajkumar's films had the highest number of openings in Bengaluru with 7–8 screens. In the '90s, Vishnuvardhan and Ravichandran's films were released in 12–13 theatres. Now every big film is released in 40plus single screens plus the 50-plus multiplexes. From 10 prints (celluloid) in the '80s, we now release films in 300plus theatres in Karnataka. ' Today, Bengaluru is still the biggest market for Kannada films. Interestingly, it is also a very big market for all other language films. 'Last week, we had an Oriya film running houseful shows in Bengaluru. A Tamil film of Rajinikanth will make a business of up to Rs 35 crore. It is not only because people are watching films in all languages but also because Bengaluru has the highest ticket prices anywhere. Hyderabad and Chennai have a cap on ticket prices, but not Bengaluru,' he points out. Discounting the lull of the Covid pandemic, there was a hint of the Bengaluru industry having created a new path with pan-India hits like the KGF series and Kantara. Mirroring the development in other industries, the 'Pan-India' phenomenon is the new craze. But insiders are concerned. The Kannada film industry no longer dominates the city. It is now just one of several entertainers. From colonial-era divides to modern-day multiplexes, from silent films to digital releases, Bengaluru's cinematic landscape has been anything but static. The city has welcomed every kind of film, nurtured multiple generations of talent, and mirrored the cultural shifts of Karnataka itself. Today, even as traditional theatres disappear and new platforms emerge, Bengaluru continues to be one of India's most dynamic film capitals, a place where the story, no matter the language, is always centrestage. (The writer is a film curator)


Time of India
3 days ago
- Time of India
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