NEW YORK, NY.- The Yeh Art Gallery, St. Johns University is presenting Lain Singh Bangdel: Moon over Kathmandu, the first solo museum exhibition in the United States by Nepals preeminent modern artist Lain Singh Bangdel (1919-2002). Moon over Kathmandu is also Bangdels first posthumous solo exhibition outside Nepal. A twentieth-century polymath, Bangdel became an acclaimed novelist, art historian, preservationist, academician, and painter who played a pivotal role in shaping the history of art in South Asia. For the first time, Moon over Kathmandu assembles approximately twenty of Bangdels paintings to chart the artists pioneering pursuit of abstraction that would help define a modern Nepal.
Born on a tea plantation in Darjeeling, India into a community of Nepali migrant workers, Bangdel remained culturally connected to his homeland of Nepal until his first visit in 1961. This exhibition explores how his signature vocabulary of abstraction crystallized upon his homecoming to Nepal at the behest of King Mahendra, and B.P. Koirala, the countrys first democratically elected prime minister. This exhibition suggests that Bangdel developed his abstraction to formulate a visual language for an increasingly modern Nepal, which had exited its self-imposed isolation from the outside world in 1951. This exhibition proposes that Bangdels cellular abstraction emerged from a variety of sources, including the vernacular architecture of South Asian cities like Kolkata (formerly Calcutta) and Kathmandu, as well as the exalted peaks of the ever-present Himalayas. Bangdels abstract paintings like Moon over Kathmandu (1962) and Abstract II (1969) advanced his belief in the sublime and rugged majesty of the worlds tallest mountain range. As such, the barrier that once separated Bangdel from Nepal became the subject that most connected him to his homeland, nourishing his artistic sensibility.
In the years leading up to his triumphant return to Nepal, Bangdel lived a remarkable life, embedding himself with intellectual circles in Independence-era Kolkata, London, and Paris. In 1939, he left the tea fields of Darjeeling to enroll in Kolkatas noted Government College of Art & Craft. Here, Bangdel studied with Zainul Abedin, who would become one of Bangladeshs foremost modern artists and an important documentarian of the Bengal Famine (1943-45), a cataclysmic event that would affect Bangdels art and writing for decades. After graduating, Bangdel found work as a commercial artist at the Kolkata-based firm D.J. Keymer, where he formed a lifelong friendship with acclaimed Indian filmmaker Satyajit Ray. During this period, Bangdel produced paintings of everyday life in Bengal, including Kolkatas impoverished suburbs, and focused his attention on writing in Nepali, publishing several novels and founding the literary journal Prabhat (Dawn).
In 1952, Bangdel left Kolkata to further his education and training in London and Paris. In connecting with the Asian diasporas artistic community, he hosted dinners in his Paris flat, where he engaged with the noted Indian modernists M.F. Husain, F.N. Souza, and Paritosh Sen. Eager to study the work of European modernists and old masters alike, Bangdel traveled extensively throughout Europe with his wife, Manu Thapa, all while publishing Nepali-language books and travelogues for audiences in his homeland. His experiments in abstract painting began in Europe, as seen in the exhibitions cubist-inflected Transformation (1956), as well as Himalaya (1954), an ethereal imagining of Bangdels homeland. In 1961, after a formal request from King Mahendra, Bangdel and his wife left London for Nepal. The experience cemented his desire to, as Koirala implored him in a 1957 letter, organize [Nepals] aesthetic movement. This call to action would ultimately lead to his 1962 solo exhibition in Nepal, his first in the country. Moon over Kathmandu thus brings to life the many notable contributions of Bangdel to the global history of modern art.
Lain Singh Bangdel: Moon over Kathmandu is organized by Owen Duffy, Ph.D., Director of the Yeh Art Gallery, St. Johns University with the support of Bibhakar Shakya, Ph.D., Founder and Chairman of the Bangdel & Shakya Foundation, and Kerry Lucinda Brown, Ph.D., Professor of Art History, Savannah College of Art & Design.