DT
PT
Subscribe To Print Edition About The Tribune Code Of Ethics Download App Advertise with us Classifieds
Add Tribune As Your Trusted Source
search-icon-img
search-icon-img
Advertisement

Masterstrokes from the days gone by

Not many know that Ebrahim Alkazi, the doyen of Indian theatre, has dealt with metaphors derived from literature as an artist too

  • fb
  • twitter
  • whatsapp
  • whatsapp
Advertisement
Advertisement

Amit Sengupta

Advertisement

Opening Lines is a rare show of art works in multimedia by the doyen of Indian theatre Ebrahim Alkazi. One of the founders of the National School of Drama and mentor of great actors such as Naseeruddin Shah and Rohini Hattangadi, very few know that he has also been an artist who has drawn a variety of metaphors derived from historical masterpieces and classical literature.

Advertisement

Soliloquy, 1948

Buried in his trunk, these were drawn when he was in his 20s and 30s and much later, and have been showcased in eminent art galleries in Bombay and London in the recent times. Discovered by his daughter Amal Allana, another famous theatre personality, she asked art curator and culture historian Ranjit Hoskote to curate the art show. And he has done a brilliant job.

The show was on at Triveni Kala Sangam in New Delhi recently and would travel to other cities and galleries in the days to come.  Says Hoskote: “Alkazi has always believed in a continuum of the arts. This is why, even as he developed a rigorous theatre training programme at the Theatre Group, Theatre Unit, and the Bhulabhai Institute in Bombay during the 1950s, he was also lecturing on modern art and organising exhibitions like This is Modern Art, a survey of the key movements within this rubric. In his works of the late 1940s and early 1950s, we see very substantially the presence of TS Eliot and Nissim Ezekiel’s poetry, James Joyce’s Ulysses, and Shakespeare’s plays. The works do not merely illustrate these literary works, they engage with them, draw them out, focus on specific moments of crisis or dilemma or transfiguration.”Some of the drawings are bare and minimalistic, some sketches chiseled but rough, like slow and steady etches, repeated as if in continuous slow motion, but with a movement and a trajectory. Significant is the painting called the Reclining Christ, where Jesus Christ seems to have been crucified and waiting for the resurrection. Drawn in black etchings, is he really waiting for his resurrection or is he really dead? In this sadness of a certain fate of his ‘death’ or ‘killing’, Christ is all too human, as vulnerable and fragile as he can be.

Advertisement

Illustrious repertoire Alkazi has directed some of the greatest and most legendary plays in Indian classical theatre

Explains Hoskote: “I see Reclining Jesus in relation to the compelling presence of Christ throughout Alkazi’s oeuvre. Remember that he was the alumnus of two major Jesuit institutions, St Vincent’s School in Poona and St Xavier’s College in Bombay. In his work of the 1960s, he focused on the Crucifixion as well as the baptism and the entombment of Christ. Ophelia belongs to a series of drawings on the Hamlet theme, in which Alkazi uses a minimal, electric line to invoke the Prince of Denmark, his ill-starred lover Ophelia, and complex mother, Queen Gertrude. In this minimal evocation of Ophelia, we see prefigured the derangement that overtakes her, following Hamlet’s unpredictable behaviour, and her sad end in the water. In art as in theatre, Alkazi moved through a sequence of haunting, memorable images — to be seen as a series on paper, and as a chain of gestures and movements on stage.”

The works are largely on paper, and have been rendered in a range and combination of media — including charcoal, ink-and-wash, printer’s ink, graphite, pastel, poster paint, carbon tracing, and frottage or textural rubbing. “What is significant about this body of work, which comprises his paintings and drawings shown at the Asian Institute, London (1950), the then- newly inaugurated Jehangir Art Gallery, Bombay (1952), and the Shridharani Gallery, New Delhi (1965), is that it demonstrates an intellectual audacity and artistic ambition far in advance of most of his contemporaries in India at the time. Remember that we are looking at the work of a very young man. The London and Bombay shows presented work he made while yet in his early twenties; and he was only 39 at the time of the Delhi show. In the work of the 1960s, we find him embracing the architectural forms of a sedimented and layered imperial history. He had moved to Delhi in 1962. The dark, brooding drawings of this period evoke the presence of Purana Qila and Feroze Shah Kotla where he would also mount grand theatre productions like Andha Yug and Tughlaq,” says Hoskote.

 Illustrious repertoire

Alkazi has directed some of the greatest and most legendary plays in Indian classical theatre, often adapted from great classics in Indian literature, and often showcased in the backdrop of Delhi’s magnificent Purana Qila built by Sher Shah Suri. His plays include Andha Yug by Satyadev Dubey, Girish Karnad’s Tughlaq and Mohan Rakesh’s Aashadh Ka Ek Din.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
tlbr_img1 Classifieds tlbr_img2 Videos tlbr_img3 Premium tlbr_img4 E-Paper tlbr_img5 Shorts