Ravishankar Raval

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Ravishankar Raval

Kalaguru Ravishankar Raval
Place of birth: Bhavnagar, Gujarat, India
Place of death: Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India

Kalaguru Ravishankar Raval (August 1, 1892-1977) was a painter, art teacher, art critic, journalist and essayist from Gujarat, India,

He worked for the magazine Vismi Sadi until it closed in 1921, and then founded the cultural magazine Kumar.

In 1970, he was named a fellow of the Indian Art Academy.

Contents

[edit] Background

Kalaguru Ravishankar Raval-a painter, art teacher, art critic, journalist and essayist from Gujarat, India (1892-1977)

For centuries, the State Gujarat in India has remained a center of Indian business and commerce. Its people have been proven traders globally. During the early part of the 20th century Gujarati community was taunted as money hungry and devoid of culture. Only painter the average Gujarati knew was a signboard painter. In that situation, Ravishankar Raval made a remarkable effort of establishing the status of art in Gujarat. Besides he himself being a well-known artist, he produced a completely new cadre of accomplished young artists. Well-known Gujarati author Kaka Saheb Kalelkar titled him Kalaguru (in Sanskrit, meaning a grand master of art). Even today, a large number of his students are teaching art in the schools of Gujarat. Dr.A.Koomarswamy, H.B.Havel and Rabindranath Tagore took great pains to make Indian artists and art lovers understand and inspire from Indian art and not to cling to the British academic style of the British Raj. In Gujarat, Kalaguru Raval made great efforts in the same direction and brought about the renaissance of Indian art. Although his formal art training took place under the principal Cecil S.Burns of J.J.School of Art, he evolved his own rich style as inspired by the ancient Indian classical painting traditions.

[edit] Personal Information

Ravishankar Raval was born on August1, 1892 at Bhavnagar. As his father was an officer in the British Post and Telegraph Service, family was transferred often from town to town, which gave the young Ravishankar many opportunities to meet a wide cross section of the folk culture of Gujarat. Later in his diary, he writes,” No one in my family was an artist so I cannot claim a direct heritage of art from any one. However, I received my artistic instincts from my mother. She was a cultured and well-organized person. I would say that I got my art psyche from her”. As a little boy, he would borrow the red-blue pencils from his postmaster father’s office desk and sketch the objects around him. In addition, for the rest of his life he was never seen idle without his sketching pad. That made him a master illustrator.

[edit] Career

During his first university year at the local Arts College, his principal asked him to paint the stage sets for the college drama festival. He was pleased with young Raval’s work and remarked, “Youngman, do not waste your time here, go to Bombay and join the art school.” This comment homed into the secret ambitions in the mental recesses of Ravishankar. When he expressed his wish to his father, a seasoned government bureaucrat, responded, “Be practical. Be an engineer. Drawing doodles would not get you anywhere.” Disappointed, the younger Raval mumbled,”College classes bore me. My heart is in art.” The artist in Ravishankar won over the engineer and he procured admission in J.J.School of Arts at Bombay a major cosmopolitan city compared to his hometown. Besides an exceptionally brilliant school career at J.J.School of Arts, the student Ravishankar was exposed to the prominent writers, thinkers, journalists of that time. In 1915, he met a prominent journalist Hajji Mohammad Alarakhiya, who was looking for a young artist-illustrator for his new cultural magazine “VISMI SADI” (20th Century).Hajji gave him the job. That contact gave a brand new purpose to his life mission. He worked for VISMI SADI for many years until its closing with the premature death of its creator Haji Mohammad in 1921. Though Hajji’s death was a terrible blow to young artist Raval, he was inspired to start an avant-garde cultural magazine “KUMAR” at Ahmedabad in 1924, which is still being published 79 years later.

[edit] Life Chronology

  • 1918 onwards till his death in 1977; Ravishankar Raval lived and flourished in the city of Ahmedabad with his ever-increasing involvement in the art world. Following are the outstanding milestones of his life:
  • 1909 High school graduation. Marriage with his life long wife Ramaben
  • 1919 Started art school in Ahmedabad in the ancient tradition of Gurukul, which never charged tuition fees. Even poor students received free art supplies from KALAGURU.
  • 1923 Second prize in art-in-industry Expo at Calcutta
  • 1924 Start of the cultural magazine KUMAR
  • 1930 Endowed with the prestigious literary Ranjitram Gold Medal for his art essays
  • 1936 Three months art tour of Japan
  • 1941 President of Art Society of India
  • 1941 President of Bombay Art Society
  • 1948 House guest of the Russian artist Nicholas Roerich at his Kulu art center
  • 1951 All India Art Conference at Calcutta
  • 1965 Nehru Award for his book on Russia
  • 1965 Government of India honored him with the title Padma Shri
  • 1970 Fellow of the Indian Art Academy
  • 1977 Died peacefully after a short sickness at 11 a.m. in his own house CHITRAKOOT at Ahmedabad. After taking leave of his life long devoted wife Ramaben, he closed his eyes with the ultimate sound of the holy mantra “Aum Namah Shivay” (Homage to Lord Shiva) on his lips.

[edit] External links