Sultan, SM (1923-1994) a renowned painter. His
real name was Sheikh Mohammad Sultan but he is more widely known as
SM Sultan. He was born on 10 August 1923 at Masimdia, a village in
Narail district. His father worked as a mason, and Sultan joined
him after five years of schooling at the Victoria Collegiate School
in Narail. Sultan also began to draw the buildings his father used
to work on and thus developed a liking for art. Sultan knew that an
art education was only possible in Calcutta, but family hardship
stood in the way. It was then that the zamindar of the area,
Dhirendranath Roy offered his help. With monetary support from the
zamindar, Sultan went to Calcutta in 1938.
But Sultan did not have the requirements for admission
into the government School of Art. With the help of another patron,
Shahid Suhrawardy, who was a member of the governing body of the
School, Sultan entered the Art School. Suhrawardy also offered him
accommodation in his house, and the use of his own library. Sultan
however did not complete his education. After three years in the
school, he left and chose to work as a freelance
artist.
Sultan had a strong Bohemian streak in his character
and something of a wanderer. He soon took to the road, travelling
to different places of India. For a means of living, he drew the
portraits of allied soldiers who had camped at different places in
India. He held the first exhibition of his art work in Simla in
1946, but no work from this period survives, not even photographs
as Sultan was totally indifferent to preservation of his
work.
For a time, Sultan lived and worked in Kashmir - mostly
landscapes and portraits. Then, after the partition of the
subcontinent in 1947, he returned to Narail. Then again, in 1951,
he left for Karachi. There he taught as an art teacher at a school,
and came in contact with artists like Abdur Rahman Chughtai and
Shaker Ali, with whom he developed lasting friendship. In 1950
Sultan had gone to USA - exhibiting his work in New York,
Washington, Chicago, and Boston, and later in London. In 1953 he
returned to Narail. There he built a school for children, and a
menagerie. He lived in a house full of cats and snakes. Except for
occasional visits to Dhaka (where he had his first exhibition in
1976) he lived in the quiet isolation of his house.
On first looking at SM Sultan's paintings, one gets the
impression of vastness and strength. His canvas is large, like a
spacious stage where life's dramas are played out. The cast of the
drama consists of agricultural labourers, fishermen, simple
householders, and toiling men and women. The men pose an enigma,
since their large muscular and sinewy bodies contrast oddly with
the emaciated physique of real life farmers and fishermen wasted by
hard labour and hunger. Yet, in painting after painting, mostly in
oil, but some in striking watercolours, Sultan painted the same
human figures, symbolically suggesting the possibility of a dream
rather than reality. Sultan believed in an arcadia where happiness
and contentment would reign, yet was acutely aware of the
exploitation, violence and deprivation that were the daily fare of
the life of the villagers.
The tension between expectation and reality is a strong
undercurrent in his paintings, sometimes ironising his contrasted
studies of innocence and deceit. His strong bodied men fight with
spears for a newly risen sandbank, or kill a fellow villager in a
clan war yet, in moments of domestic repose, they revert to their
roles of caring fathers or husbands. At times, they turn into
thinking figures, as in Reminiscence. His men are drawn in
the European Renaissance tradition while his women- supple-breasted
and graceful- belong to the old Indian tradition. Instead of
delicate lines however, Sultan uses strong curved lines, and flat
body tones so that they do not stand apart from the crowd of active
males.
Sultan's watercolours are bright and lively, but treat
the same theme - nature and rural life. They contrast sharply with
the often drab and flat oils painted in deep colours. Sultan tended
to work heavily all over his canvas without living any empty space.
His drawings, however, are masterful in their economy and
compactness. The lines are powerful and full blown. In his later
works though, the composition is less tight and focused, perhaps a
sign that Sultan was growing a little impatient with the reality of
his time.
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Sheikh Mohammed Sultan,
one of the pioneer painters of Bangladesh. He was born in 1923 at
Masimdia, Narial, his father being Sheikh Meser, a master mason.
His formal education began at Collegiate School which he left in
1933. His debut began when doing a sketch of Dr Shyma Prasad
Mukerjee, who was visiting his school. Running off to Calcutta to
fill his ambition in 1938, being encouraged by Dhirendra Nath Roy,
a Narial landed gentry. On leaving Calcutta Art School, he began
his role as a promising painter under the patronage of Maharaja of
Karporetola at Simla, Malik Feroze Khan Noon at Lahore and Miss
Fatima Jinnah at Karachi. Going to Lahore in 1948, he enjoyed the
close friendship of leading artists like Shaker Ali, Chughtai, Nagi
and Sheikh Ahmad.
SM Sultan did not bother
his head much with either grammar or discipline and made faces of
men and women along with nature, blending imagination with nature.
He was a confirmed bachelor who could be described as a roving
mystic. He settled down in an abandoned building in a quiet corner
of Narail, where he lived with an adopted family and pets of his
own including dogs, mongoose and monkeys. In 1952, a critique, Syed
Amjad Ali described him as being mostly a landscape painter of
Bengal and Kashmir who had "severe selectiveness of lines of human
figures, the largeness and boldness of composition and above all
the human interest and tragic not that welcomes his maturity. The
bulging knotting muscles of his farmers and boatmen recalls the
works of Pieter Breugel and Vincent Van Gogh. The central theme in
his painting was "man in relationship with soil and
water"
For long SM Sultan had
experimented with native vegetable and earth colours, doing his
paintings with own hands rather than with a brush or a palette,
fixing the paints on the background with local resin. It was
natural that under the circumstances, the weather would have a
harsh impact on the preservation of his works, even though any of
his works today sell for an astronomical price.
SM Sultan won the
"Ekushey Padak" in 1982; he was given the special honour of being
the "Resident Artist" since 1984; Bangladesh Charu Shilpi Sangsad
award in 1986 as well as the "Independence Award" in 1993. He
established the Fine Art Institute at Narail in 1969 and another
institute "Charupeet " at Jessore in 1973. His last days were spent
as a free-lance artist at Narial.
He died on 10 October
1994.