Tagore's painting exhibited in Egypt

Press Trust of India  |  Cairo 

Paintings of were displayed in an exhibition here to commemorate the 157th birth

Inaugurating the festival, Bhattacharyya spoke about the friendship between and Egyptian Shawki.

"Tagore's best friend was the of Arab Poets Today, is coming back to his friend's house once again. Thanks for the ministry of culture for making this visit happen, the said.

The painting exhibition is part of the Tagore Festival which runs from May 3 to 7 to commemorate the birth anniversary of Tagore, who penned India's national anthem.

Amrit Sen, of English at in Santiniketan, West Bengal, held a presentation about Tagore's "rhythm of colours".

Tagore, who began painting much later in his life when he was into his 60s, had made more than 3,000 paintings and drawings in the last 17 years of his life.

He did not have a formal training in art but created a variety of images.

Sen said that initially, Tagore started to paint as painting is a universal language and can reach everyone without the need to be translated.

After he developed his love for painting, Tagore described the visible world around him as a vast procession of forms.

Most of the landscapes he painted showed nature bathed in the evening light, skies and forms coagulating into ominous silhouettes.

His landscapes invoke mystery and a sense of disquiet and silence.

Tagore did not name his paintings, but by leaving them untitled he freed them from the limits of literary imagination, Sen said.

"He wished his viewers to read the paintings in their own light and admire them in individual ways. His painted faces speak of vast human experience and intrinsic human emotion," Sen said.

The Tagore Festival is organised by the (MACIC), the cultural wing of the

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First Published: Sun, May 06 2018. 14:25 IST