Gulammohammed Sheikh: Graphic Prints, Part-I

June 28, 2024 to July 26, 2024

Gallery Sumukha

Still Life

Still LifeGulammohammed Sheikh

wood cut

1957

Sitting Woman

Sitting WomanGulammohammed Sheikh

wood cut

1957

River

RiverGulammohammed Sheikh

lino cut

1957

Figure with Still Life

Figure with Still LifeGulammohammed Sheikh

lino cut

1957

Figures and Still Life

Figures and Still LifeGulammohammed Sheikh

wood cut

1957

Women Carrying Firewood

Women Carrying FirewoodGulammohammed Sheikh

lithograph

1963

Horses Moving

Horses MovingGulammohammed Sheikh

lithograph

1963

Horse with Tonga

Horse with TongaGulammohammed Sheikh

lithograph

1963

Tonga in the City

Tonga in the CityGulammohammed Sheikh

lino cut

1961

Tonga in a Cityscape

Tonga in a CityscapeGulammohammed Sheikh

lithograph

1963

Female figure with Still Life

Female figure with Still LifeGulammohammed Sheikh

lithograph

1962-63

Tonga with  Figures

Tonga with FiguresGulammohammed Sheikh

lithograph

1962-63

Horses

HorsesGulammohammed Sheikh

lithograph

1963

Tonga against the Cityscape

Tonga against the CityscapeGulammohammed Sheikh

lithograph

1963

Landscape

LandscapeGulammohammed Sheikh

lithograph

1968

Tree with Figures

Tree with FiguresGulammohammed Sheikh

lithograph

1968

Tree and Tree

Tree and TreeGulammohammed Sheikh

lithograph

1968

Unmoolan 2

Unmoolan 2Gulammohammed Sheikh

etching-aquatint

1971

Untitled

UntitledGulammohammed Sheikh

etching-aquatint, (copper plate) first version

1971

Untitled

UntitledGulammohammed Sheikh

etching-aquatint, (copper plate)

1971

Untitled

UntitledGulammohammed Sheikh

wood cut, circa

1970

Riot

RiotGulammohammed Sheikh

etching-aquatint

1971

Man 1

Man 1Gulammohammed Sheikh

lino cut

1972

Speaking Tree

Speaking TreeGulammohammed Sheikh

silk screen, circa

1980

Tree by the Wall

Tree by the WallGulammohammed Sheikh

lithograph, circa

1980

Residency Reversed

Residency ReversedGulammohammed Sheikh

etching, first version,

1983

Residency Reversed

Residency ReversedGulammohammed Sheikh

etching-aquatint

1983

On Salvaging a Sick Print

On Salvaging a Sick PrintGulammohammed Sheikh

etching

1985. First version

On Salvaging a Sick Print

On Salvaging a Sick PrintGulammohammed Sheikh

Etching

1985

Meanderings

MeanderingsGulammohammed Sheikh

Etching-aquatint, 2nd version in brown tint

circa 1990

Meanderings

MeanderingsGulammohammed Sheikh

Etching-aquatint, circa

1990

Moonscape

MoonscapeGulammohammed Sheikh

etching-aquatint

1992

Expelled Angel

Expelled AngelGulammohammed Sheikh

Silk screen

Circa 1990

Mother India

Mother IndiaGulammohammed Sheikh

Digital collage, (silk screen)

20..

Still Life

Still LifeGulammohammed Sheikh

Wood cut

1956

Still Life with Landscape (Days of the Dagger)

Still Life with Landscape (Days of the Dagger)Gulammohammed Sheikh

Etching -aquatint, final version, brown tint

Circa 1993

Still Life with Landscape (Days of the Dagger), in process

Still Life with Landscape (Days of the Dagger), in processGulammohammed Sheikh

Etching, first version

Circa 1990

Still Life with Landscape (Days of the Dagger)

Still Life with Landscape (Days of the Dagger)Gulammohammed Sheikh

Etching -aquatint, second version

Circa 1993

Exhibition View

Exhibition ViewTsherin Sherpa

Exhibition View

Exhibition ViewTsherin Sherpa

Exhibition View

Exhibition ViewTsherin Sherpa

Exhibition View

Exhibition ViewTsherin Sherpa

Exhibition View

Exhibition ViewTsherin Sherpa

#Gulammohammed Sheikh: Graphic Prints a retrospective in two parts

curated by Pushpamala N

Part I: Handprints

woodcut, linocut, etching-aquatint, lithography, silkscreen

Celebrated as a painter, poet, art historian and teacher, Gulammohammed Sheikh’s long passion for printmaking is less known. This two- part retrospective looks at his printmaking practice from the 1950s to the present.

Part I is conceived as an archive, exploring Sheikh’s handmade prints including his forays into little magazines using printmaking, and his interest in working collaboratively to democratise art and ideas. As a high school boy in Surendranagar in the early 1950s he illustrated and wrote for a handwritten literary magazine, Pragati (Progress), whose single copy would be kept on the local library table to peruse. It can be seen as a precursor to his later interests when as an art student in Baroda, he learnt printmaking and became active in Gujarati literary circles. He illustrated the avant garde literary magazine Kshitij (Horizon) with original lino cuts by fellow artists alongside publishing poetry in free verse. His printmaking took an autobiographical turn in late 1960s when he also began writing his Memoirs in free-flowing prose. After attending the landmark printmaking workshop in 1970 by Paul Lingren at USIS Delhi where he learnt aquatint, he became seriously interested in printmaking and bought his own etching press. Around the same time, he started the little magazine Vrishchik (Scorpio) with Bhupen Khakhar while teaching art history in Baroda, to initiate a dialogue among artists. Each issue had a print run of 500 copies with linocuts and lithographs as covers and pull outs. Sheikh later established the Chhaap Foundation workshop and residency with Kavita Shah and Vijay Bagodi in the late 1990s to popularise printmaking, offering facilities for etching, dry point, lino, woodcut, and mono-print.

Starting out as a printmaker working within a modernist idiom, his work over the years, strongly influenced by his literary and art historical interests, turned magic realist. Soon, with the advent of digital printmaking in India, he became one of the pioneers to use the technology – but that will be surveyed in Part II of the retrospective.

We are proud to present this groundbreaking retrospective in Bangalore, which will further add to the understanding of the work of this eminent artist. This is his first major show in South India. 

Pushpamala N