M. F. Hussain Biography - Paintings, Life History.
A colour reflective of passion, energy, and the whole Indian kaleidoscope, one can notice the tinge of red and its variants in most of M F Husain’s paintings. Maqbool Fida Husain, once, said that he never intended to “denigrate or hurt the beliefs of anyone through art”, but quite a few of his paintings made waves in certain communities (especially Hindu) of our country.
Mf Hussain has been called the Picasso of India and he is a well known Painter. He has also produced and directed few movies, including Gaja Gamini with Madhuri Dixit who was the subject of a series of his paintings which he signed Fida. The film was intended as a tribute to Ms. Dixit herself.
In 1966 Hussain was awarded the Padmasriri by the government of India. Navigation PreserveArticles.com: Preserving Your Articles for Eternity PreserveArticles.com is a free service that lets you to preserve your original articles for eternity.
M.F. Hussain was born in Pandharpur, Madhya Pradesh on September 17, 1915 to mother Zunaib and father Fida. His mother died when he was three years old. His father remarried and the family moved to Indore where he did his primary education. His association with painting began at an early age- he learnt the art of calligraphy and practiced the.
Abstract Paintings of M.F. Husain 1. The Puppet Dancers. M.F Husain used to love toys. He developed affection for them while working as a toy designer in a furniture company. Though he didn’t work as a toy designer for long, his adoration for toys did last. The same is evident in many of his paintings.
M.F. Husain, a founding member of the Bombay Progressive Artists' Group, created the mural-sized painting Lightning on the occasion of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s 1975 Congress Party public rally at Shivaji Park in Bombay, or Mumbai, as it is now known. On June 25 of that year, Prime Minister Gandhi imposed a state of emergency across India in response to what she perceived as a state of.
The case of Sakal Papers v. Union of India, which was decided asfar back as 1961, raised questions of far reaching constitutional importance which have yet not been satisfactorily answered.