Friday, April 14, 2023

A Brief Discussion of the Book ‘Kalara Bichara’ by Odia Artist Gopal Kanungo

Ramakanta Samantaray and Sailen Routray


Cover of the Book 'Kalara Bichara'

This is the cover of the Odia book ‘KalAra BichAra’ by Odia artist Gopal Kanungo (1904-1971) which is now out of print. It was published in 1955 by Utkal University which was then housed in Cuttack. The printer was Bidhubhushan Misra, Maharaja Shri Ramachandra Utkal University Press, Cuttack. 

The print run was one thousand copies and the book was priced at five and half rupees. ‘KalAra BichAra’ was printed in 1/8 demy size with 161 pages. Including the cover it had 120 illustrations out of which six were colour plates.

The Floor Plan of Konark Temple
(Page 111 of 'Kalara Bichara')


The book’s introduction (originally written in Bengali and then translated into Odia) was by Ramendranath Chakravorty, a pioneer in Indian printmaking. He had written this half page note in 1950 when serving as the Principal of Government School of Art, Calcutta. This means it took around five years for the book’s manuscript to see the light of print. 

The volume had thirteen chapters that included themes ranging from Indian and various other Asian artistic traditions, European art forms and technical aspects of temple architecture, modern sculpture and architecture.

The Ashokan Elephant of Dhauli
(Page 129 of 'Kalara Bichara')

He was born in Lentigada village in undivided Puri district. His father Jagabandhu Kanungo, among other work, served as the Dewan of the princely state of Damapada and as the manager of the Sakhigopal temple near Puri. 

Gopal Kanungo did part of his school education in the famous nationalist institution Satyabadi Bana Bidyalaya. Then he went on to study for a BA degree in Ravenshaw College at Cuttack followed by a stint (1928-34) in Government School of Art, Calcutta. 

He then worked as an art teacher at Government High School Balasore. He also taught in Government Art School, Khallikote for some time.

Illustration of 'ChitA', a folk art form of Odia women
(Page 63 of 'Kalara Bichara')

Gopal Kanungo was a major artist and designer of his times and undertook one of the first experimentations with cubism and expressionism in the state. He was also a major writer in Odia and is now chiefly remembered as the translator of Omar Khayam’s ‘Rubaiyat’ (1954) into Odia. A major contribution of his to Odisa’s artistic discourse was the book ‘Utkalara ChitrakalA’ (1964) published by Orissa Lalit Kala Akademi.

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