National
Gallery of Modern Art organised the Virtual Tour titled “Gurudev – Journey of
the Maestro through his visual vocabulary” on May 07, 2020 to commemorate the
159th birth anniversary of Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore. Israel named a street in
Tel Aviv after Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore on his 159th birth anniversary
to honor his valuable contributions in the field and to mankind. Rabindranath Tagore was popularly known as
‘Gurudev’, he was born in an affluent Family.
·
Tagore
was primarily known as a writer, poet, playwright, philosopher and
aesthetician, music composer and choreographer, founder of a unique educational
institution – Visva- Bharati and a painter.
·
Tagore
began writing poetry at the tender age of eight years old and at 16 years of
age,Tagore released his first collection of poems under the pen name
‘Bhanusimha’.
·
He
had spoken at the World Parliament for Religions in the years 1929 and 1937.
Contributions:
·
He
wrote the National Anthems of India and Bangladesh.
·
He
left his imprint on art and played a role in transforming its practices and
ushering into modernism.
·
Between
1928 and 1940, Rabindranath painted more than 2000 images. He never gave any
title to his paintings.
·
Expressionism
in European art and the primitive art of ancient cultures inspired him.
Awards:
v In 1913, he became the first
Indian (first non – European) to receive a Nobel Prize in Literature for his
novel ‘Geetanjali’.
Tagore
and Freedom Struggle:
ü He denounced British imperialism,
yet he did not fully support or agree with Gandhi and his Non-cooperation
Movement.
ü He viewed British rule as a
symptom of the overall “sickness” of the social “disease” of the public.
ü In his writings, he also voiced
his support of Indian nationalists.
ü Rabindranath Tagore wrote the
song Banglar Mati Banglar Jol (Soil of Bengal, Water of Bengal) to unite the
Bengali population after Bengal partition in 1905.
ü He also wrote the famed ‘Amar
Sonar Bangla’which helped ignite a feeling of nationalism amongst people.
ü He started the Rakhi Utsavwhere
people from Hindu and Muslim communities tied colourful threads on each other’s
wrists.
ü Tagore rejected violence from the
British as well and renounced the knighthood that had been given to him by Lord
Hardinge in 1915 in protest of the violent Amritsar massacre in which the
British killed at least 1526 unarmed Indian citizens.
ü The cornerstone of Tagore’s
beliefs and work is the idea that anti-colonialism cannot simply be achieved by
rejecting all things British, but should consist of incorporating all the best
aspects of western culture into the best of Indian culture.
No comments:
Post a Comment