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Hassan, Quamrul (1921-1988) artist, born on 2 December 1921 in
Kolkata, where his father, Muhammad Hashim, was superintendent of the Tinjala Graveyard. His paternal residence was in Narenga village in the Burdwan district of
west bengal.
Quamrul Hassan studied at Calcutta Model ME School (1930-1935)
and Calcutta Madrasa (1936-1937). He graduated in Fine Arts from the Government
Institute of Arts (presently, College of Arts and Crafts, Kolkata) in
1947.
During his student life, he was also involved with Boy Scouts,
the bratachari
movement, Manimela, Mukul Fauj etc. Apart from his
interest in art, he was also interested in physical exercise and,
in 1945, he became the Bengal champion in a physical exercise
competition. Like many Bengali Muslims, he was involved in the
Pakistan movement and trained the young boys and girls who belonged
to the Mukul Fauj.
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Quamrul Hassan |
After partition, Quamrul Hassan came to dhaka
and, in collaboration with Shilpacharya zainul
abedin, established the Government Institute of Fine Arts (at
present, the Institute of Fine Arts) in 1948. He taught at the same institute
till 1960. In 1950, Quamrul Hassan organised the Art Group in Dhaka.
The East Pakistan Small and Cottage Industries Corporation
was established under the leadership of Quamrul Hassan in 1960, and he
worked there as Director of the Design Centre till his retirement in 1978.
After his retirement, Hassan worked as a free-lance artist.
Always politically active, Quamrul Hassan was involved
in the non-cooperation
movement (1969-70). He also took part in the war
of liberation, serving as the Director of the Art Division
of the Information and Radio Department of the Bangladesh Government in
exile. During this time he designed a poster depicting a ferocious-looking
aga mohammad
yahya khan, the military president of Pakistan. The caption
of the poster was, 'These animals have to be killed'.
Quamrul
Hassan could never sit idle. Even in the midst of company, he would
keep on doodling or sketching. While presiding over a session of
the Second National Poetry Festival held on the Dhaka University
campus on 2 February 1988, he drew a sketch of a snake, satirising
Lieutenant General hussain
muhammad ershad, the army general who had become president
of Bangladesh through a coup. Hassan had barely completed the sketch
when he suffered a massive heart attack. |
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Three Women, Oilpainting,
1983
[Quamrul Hassan] |
Hassan's subjects range from colourful pictures depicting
a pristine, rural Bengal to a politically corrupt, degenerate one. His
portraits and sketches of men and women, animals, birds, snakes etc. reflect
the traditional rural society of Bengal and its natural beauty. Juxtaposing
these pictures are his fierce cartoons and sketches of military rulers,
Pakistani or Bangadeshi, which inspired the general public during the
late sixties, the liberation war, and during the movement against Lieutenant
General Ershad.
Quamrul Hassan combined popular and modern methods in
his paintings and thus came to be known as 'Patua Quamrul Hassan'. Solo
exhibitions of his paintings were held in Dhaka (1955, 1964, 1973, 1975,
1991, 1995), Rangoon (1975), Rawalpindi (1969) and London (1979).
Quamrul Hassan received several awards and honours for
his contribution to art, among them the President's Gold Medal (1965),
the Comilla Foundation Gold Medal (1977), the Independence Day Award (1979),
Bangladesh Charu Shilpi Sangsad Honour (1984) and Kazi Mahbubullah Trust
Gold Medal (1987). He was made a Fellow of bangla
academy in 1985. The Government of Yugoslav (1985) and the
Government of Bangladesh (1986) issued commemorative stamps using his
paintings Tin Kanya and Naior respectively. [Syed Azizul
Huq] |
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