The Faculty of Fine Arts, established in 1949, at
Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda was intended to provide an alternative to established art schools while promoting the value of contemporary art. The school's curriculum centered around the concept of "Living Traditions," or the idea that traditions are necessary to modern and contemporary art, and arts must learn from them. This concept led to exhibitions of folk art and the Fine Arts Fair, developed by teacher and artist
K. G. Subramanyan. At Fine Arts Fairs, local craftspeople would teach students their trade, inviting students to learn from these traditions and experiment with different media and forms. This proved especially fruitful for
Mrinalini Mukherjee, a contemporary artist who would eventually become acclaimed for her hemp-based sculptures. These fairs also inspired Subramanyan's work in terra cotta. Between 1962 and 1963, Subramanyan and a team of students and faculty collaborated on a terracotta tile mural on the front wall of the Rabindralaya auditorium in Lucknow, illustrating the
Rabindranath Tagore story
The King of the Dark Chamber.This kind of collaboration between teacher and student was an important aspect of teaching at Baroda, while the medium and content reflected Subramanyan's emphasis on folk craft and indigenous culture. Subramanyan celebrated craftspeople and folk art because he believed in craftsmanship as an alternative to the negative effects of consumerism. He said, In addition to drawing inspiration from tribal traditions and crafts, Baroda artists also believed in documenting and preserving these traditions. Concerned that folk arts were dying out, artist
Jyoti Bhatt photographed the lives and art of different tribes around India, including the people of Kutch and Saurashtra regions as well as Rabari people. Through his travels, Bhatt photographed and documented the artistic traditions of women from all over India, including Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab, Gujarat, and Bihar. In 1981, artists
Jogen Chowdhury,
Bhupen Khakhar,
Nalini Malani,
Sudhir Patwardhan,
Gulam Mohammed Sheikh, and
Vivan Sundaram participated in
A Place for People, an exhibition focused on contemporary narrative and figurative art. This exhibition marked the beginning of the Narrative Figurative Movement of Indian art, which announced the return of the narrative Indian art, a turn away from the abstraction that had dominated much of the twentieth century. In an accompanying essay,
Geeta Kapur laid out an argument for the value of the narrative in contemporary Indian art, arguing that the centrality of the narrative (and the figural) in historical Indian art, like temple architecture and miniature painting, made the narrative a vital resource for contemporary Indian artists. She saw modernism's simplification of forms as parallel to Indian traditions in sculpture and miniaturism, and thus an important consideration for contemporary artists. Fundamentally, she believed in the power of the narrative and the figurative as the basis for a life-affirming art that moves away from nihilism and towards a more positive future for both Indian art and India itself, one that acknowledges the complexity and contradictions of contemporary urban life. Kapur's assertions were supplemented by the artist's statements in the catalog.
Gulam Mohammed Sheikh wrote, While the Narrative Figurative Movement became an important turn for Indian modern artists, it also proved to be somewhat controversial. The
Indian Radical Painters' and Sculptors' Association pushed back against Kapur's idealistic interpretation of narrative art, launching their own counter-exhibition titled
Questions and Dialogue. Despite this controversy, the Narrative Figurative Movement continues to be an important era of Indian art, as it launched the careers of artists like
Sudhir Patwardhan,
Bhupen Khakhar, and
Nalini Malani. ==Exhibitions==