Benode Behari Mukherjee: After Sight


Vibrant exhibition at David Zwirner Gallery of work by the Indian artist Benode Behari Mukherjee from the 1950s and 60s.

These were bright abstracted collages putting you in mind of Matisse but most intriguing was that Mukherjee was blind when he made them. He shaped and organised the pieces but touch and dictated the colours to assistants. The pictures made with paper, news print, string and bits of material, were full of action and life. I loved the pictures of street performers.

Even more remarkable were the drawings on show, all also done after he had gone blind. They were expressive pictures of people and animals with no hints that they were produced from memory and gesture not sight.

Closes 22 February 2020

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