Ramkinkar Baij
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Ramkinkar Baij (Bengali: রামকিন্কর বেজ)(May 20, 1906 - August 2, 1980) is an Indian sculptor, known as the Pioneer of Modern Indian Sculpture.
[edit] Early life
Baij was born in a economically modest family in the Bankura district of the modern state of West Bengal in India. While in his mid-teens Ramkinkar used to paint portraits of Indian freedom fighters involved in the Non-Cooperation Movement against the British rulers of India. At age 16 he got noticed by the renowned journalist Ramanand Chatterjee. Four years later Ramkinkar joined Rabindranath Tagore's university at Shantiniketan as a student of fine arts. After obtaining a diploma from the university he went on to head the sculpture department.
[edit] Style
Being no introvert or recluse, Baij responded to the a natural zest for life, and took a great interest in human figures, body language, and in the general human drama. Modern Western art and pre and post-classical Indian art were his main point of reference. He used local material advantageously, and worked combining the skills of a modeller and a carver. His paintings too take on expressionist dimensions like his sculptures, which are filled with force and vitality.
Some of his sculptures are preserved and displayed at locations including Kala Bhavan, Santiniketan. Late Rani Chanda Collection & Academy of Fine Arts, Calcutta, H.K. Kejriwal Collection & Karnataka Chitrakala Parishad, Bangalore, Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi, Reserve Bank of India, New Delhi, Jane and Kito de Boer, Dubai, and the Delhi Art Gallery in New Delhi.