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Prayag Jha

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Prayag Jha Chillar, commonly known as simply Prayag Jha, is a contemporary Indian artist, specializing in Etching. Her etchings are in collections all over India, including the National Gallery of Modern Art in Delhi. Her work has been broadly showcased, in over 25 solo exhibitions from 1971 to 2012 across Jehangir Art Gallery, Taj Art Gallery, Bajaj Art Gallery, Art Heritage New Delhi. Jha's best-known work is inspired by natural forms such as grass and leaves. While her earlier works were primarily monochrome, they have evolved to include strong colors.

Early Life and Education

Born in UP(Agra) 15 March 1945, she passed the National Diploma in Fine Arts (Paintings), securing a First Class in 1971 from College of Art in New Delhi (Diploma in 1971), and then went on to do a Post Diploma in (Graphic art), securing First Class with distinction from the MS University of Baroda Faculty of Fine Arts under the aegis of Prof N B Joglekar in 1973.[clarification needed] From 1973 to 1975, she did pen drawings and etchings in Bombay as a freelance artist.

She was selected for a 3-year senior fellowship from the Ministry of Human Resources and Development of India for the etching project on Kalidas Meghdoot from 1995 to 1997.

She married sculptor JK Chillar on July 1971, in New Delhi.[1] The couple is typically known by the name "Bonds of Art".[by whom?]

Work

Prayag Jha is a well-known graphic (etchings) artist and painter from India. As a person she is very unassuming, self-effacing, and a recluse with a number of distinctions garnered in her career.[citation needed] She comes from a small town near Agra, India[clarification needed] and had her early education from Delhi. She graduated from New Delhi College of Art in 1971. Subsequently, she went to the legendary University of Fine Arts in Baroda, Gujarat to study graphics.

Prayag's career got a further impetus when she married sculpture JK Chillar in 1971. While she has won many awards, one of her biggest achievements was getting honored at the 7th Triennale with an international award for her etching titled Bachelors House. Several other awards preceded this honor from State Level Awards to the National Award honored to her by the President of India, all carving a niche in her field. Her shows are frequently held at the Art Heritage Gallery, National Gallery of Modern Art and many more.[citation needed]

What is it that makes Prayag Jha a front rank Graphic artist? Firstly it is her immense technical expertise. She has mastered pen drawings and etchings to a remarkable degree; her draftsmanship is next to perfect. Secondly her imagery is open to the idea of her work being called Modernism from post independence. In a very indirect manner some of her images may be viewed as rooted in surrealistic concepts. But what carried one way is the depth of emotion, Prayag is a thinking artist. It does not need any talent to say that she is an introvert but yet there is nothing-self conscious in her imagery or her technique, it is essentially simple and very evocative.[citation needed]

Among the best known series is the prolific series that featured her etching Crows. Her work titled The Bachelor's House presents the lifestyle of a bachelor as one of the central images in this series. This series showcases the Charpai (Jute beds), which lie on their sides, with deserted bottles and glasses in the scene. Prayag has tried to reflect the desolation and loneliness in this series.[citation needed]

The crows meanwhile behave as if they owned these interiors. It is a very lucid concept on the artist's parts, something that connects all these images with surrealism. Among one of her series is an etching titled 'House without the Woman', here too it is the crows that rule. ' In Front of the House' is yet another graphic work in this series. All these works depict and emulate the feelings and the emotions of man and woman without the presence of any human being.

One of Prayag's most brilliant etchings in this series is the Flight. Though one of the most impactful works in her series is the one called 'Scattered Life'. This was created before 'The Bachelors House' and other contemporary works. In this National Award winning 'Scattered Life' series, Prayag shows broken planks of woods with crows perched on them. This particular etching, which won the national award, is the most memorable. There is another in this series, which was sent to the Festival of India in the US in 1985. Her other series includes the work titled 'In The Evening'. Here we have crows' perches on a tree trunk with its bare branches. The leafless tree and the silhouettes of the image cannot but connote the concept of peaceful environment and rest. This is a very poetic work indeed. Her other work titled 'Alone' shows a single crow resting on stones in the wilderness. Such etchings establish Prayag Jha as a front rank artist, and a gifted visualizer.

Prayag's delineation of crows as they appropriate settling rights in human habits reminds me of Alfred Hitchcock's ' Fills The Birds' based on a story by Dalpine Du Maurier. Prayag's crows do not exactly carry a threat but neither are they lovable little birds. Crows are always supposed to be most unwanted and neglected of all birds; here they carry with them the point of loneliness and devastation.

The visual metaphor consistently pursued by Prayag becomes very potent as we go from etching to etching. The art of etchings claims a long pictorial tradition. The meticulous draftsmanship of work is not conventionally realistic. It is evocation of mood, is expressionistic and its treatment of life and images is surrealistic. She conjures up these strangely hypnotic images and makes it possible for us to undertake a journey in her mind, her fertile but mysterious subconscious.

If one has strong determination to achieve what his or her heart sets out for then there is no stopping. Mumbai based Prayag Jha is one such artist who has lived up to it and came out with flying colors despite all barriers.

Even amidst conservative thinking, Prayag stood firm on her creative instincts, facing opposition from quite a few fronts, she still emerged as one of the finest artist in the society. It was not an easy decision to have a career in India in graphic arts and painting and being a woman makes it even tougher. Prayag had to pour out her dedication to stand out and continue her work while all her classmates were forced to lead a life of homemakers in India.

Her sheer devotion and determination is also evident from her selection of art forms. Etching is the unique form in which she has specialised; it is in the process of using a sharp needle pen to draw onto a zinc plate, which are later etched with acid to create the depth, form and dimension. And then using roller printers to create the impression of the etched forms on paper. The work on them reflects its uniqueness (Chemicals, Paraffin Oil and Kerosene) and below the Surface printing with the use of a special pressure comes in as the special feature of this art form. This uniqueness of the art form attracted her to it.

Though it requires special facilities still the output gives one the desired satisfaction. It requires patience and concentration to carve out on the metal plates, adds the artist who is currently working on making etchings on the ancient Indian epic called Meghdoot "The Messenger Clouds".

Not just in the selection of art form, even her themes reflect the innovation of her thoughts. She prefers to bring out "reality" with her unique style. Her first etchings on the rejected objects of society like using straw, fallen feathers of birds etc. rightly explain her way of thinking.

The ability to find uniqueness in reality has made her the recipient of various awards and has made her work timeless and ever engaging.

Honors and awards

  • Recipient of Vijoo Sadwelkar Award, 2003
  • Excellence Award in 2003 from Jehangir Art Gallery
  • International Gold Medal Award in the 7th Triennale India(World Exhibition of Art with over 80 participating countries) making her the first Indian to ever receive this award in Graphic Arts, arranged by Lalit Kala Akademi New Delhi, 1991.
  • Honoured with the Maharashtra Gaurav Puraskar from the Government of Maharashtra in December 1990 at Mumbai.
  • National Award from the National Academy of Art arranged by Lalit Kala Akademi New Delhi, 1985
  • 3 Consecutive honours in Graphic Art from the Art Society of India, Bombay in 1976, 1978, 1988.
  • Second prize in Members Art Exhibition held at Artist Center Bombay, 1976.
  • The only Art Critic Award in India from Artist's Center of Bombay, 1974.
  • Consecutive 3 first prize honors in the Graphic Arts Annual Exhibition, held at Gujarat State Lalit Kala Akademi, Gandhi Nagar during 1971 to 1973.
  • Numerous additional awards in the field of etchings from all over.

Works in prestigious collections

Member of Art Jury

  • Jury member on the National Art Exhibition arranged by National Lalit Kala Academy New Delhi in 1992
  • Member of jury for All India Exhibition of Art arranged by UP State Lalit Kala Academy at Lucknow in 1995
  • Member of Jury for All India Exhibition of Art, Bombay Art Society in 1994
  • Member of jury for Maharashtra State Exhibition, Mumbai in 1996
  • Member of jury for All India Exhibition arranged by NZCC, at Nagpur in 1996

References

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