Bio and images
It is surprising to learn that Sisir Sahana is the sole
artist in India who is primarily devoted to glass technology and making
glass art. Sahana, a Spring 2004 Resident Fellow at the Creative Glass
Center of America in Wheaton Village, draws on the great Indian tradition of
figurative sculpture in his work and has been especially inspired by Hindu
temples covered with many small figures executed in rough textured
terracotta.
The son of a farmer, Sahana grew up in a small village
in West Bengal, where he never saw a bus or a car until he was seven or
eight years old. From a very early age, he was fascinated with the visual
arts. His father tried to discourage him, even beating him for drawing and
painting, but when Sahana’s artist uncle died, he left his crayons to the
boy. The local teacher also encouraged him to develop his talent. Although
his father refused to pay for art college, Sahana’s teacher told him, “You
just go there,” and paid his fees.
Sahana went to the village of Santiniketan founded in
1863 by Maharishi Devendranath Tagore. In 1901 his son, Rabindranath Tagore,
established an experimental open-air school which is now the internationally
recognized Visva-Bharati University. There, attending classes held outdoors
under the trees, Sahana “slowly entered into a real understanding of what an
artist should do.” In the five year degree program he studied many materials
and processes and came away with skills and a certainty of the central
importance of nature. His painting had evolved to reverse painting on
glass.
After graduating, Sahana went on to study stained-glass
at St. Martins College of Art and Design in London, but, somehow, he became
increasingly interested in glass as a medium in itself. After experimenting
with slumping and fusing, he began moving toward the multicolored glass
sculptures for which he’s best known, though he continues to make paintings,
as well.
Sahana now maintains a studio in Hyderabad. He visits
his family home, where his three brothers now manage the family farms, two
or three times a year. He completed his first residency at the CGCA in 2000.
Because the field of glass art is just beginning in India, many processes
which are fairly straightforward in the United States are problematic.
Melting temperatures of colored glass are not compatible and sophisticated
facilities for grinding, polishing and fusing are not available. Though
Sahana is able to hire workers to help with some of the more mechanical
tasks, he was enthusiastic about the possibility of returning for a second
residency at Wheaton Village, where he could tackle ambitious,
large-scale subjects.
The theme of Sahana’s present work is “Geosocial
Reality: The Transformation.” It’s a complex meditation on the ways life is
changing on this planet. Four vertical relief panels combine nature motifs:
leaves, farm animals, birds, and flowers mingle with human figures. A book
labeled “Hi-Tec” is perused by a female figure in the upper register of one
panel, while others have a more bucolic character. Sahana observes
that “In India I have seen that urbanization--cutting down trees and carving
up the rural lands—is very destructive. I pick up what is happening. I do
not judge. There is no statement.” Nevertheless, he believes that the
age-old struggle for survival and the power of nature continue to be the
meaningful center of life.
In the kiln-cast panel Farmer Family, a man gazes
nose-to-nose into the eyes of his cow: each being occupies a position of
importance. The wife, above, is crowned like a goddess. All beings have a
place on earth. In a related relief, a warrior with his horse and
spear remind us that “Everybody is a warrior. The warrior is not past.” But,
neither is the farmer. “The horse helps us to prosper. The cows [depicted in
glass] come from my village and are part of our life. We all live together.
If I die today I will go to the soil and be excavated. Everybody will go
through that process. I love it.”
Sahana is not religious in the traditional sense, but
he sees the Hindu gods within the living man and woman of today. His
depictions of women in particular manifest the timeless variety of female
deities and their stories. “Woman today may be the most powerful
person. Woman struggles so much. They come into my work as imaginative
forms. Maybe nature is a woman, feminine.” He acknowledges Hinduism as a way
of life—an understanding of nature.
Sahana’s sculpture have something in common with the
paintings of Chagall in their poetic use of color, free-floating dream-like
forms, and rural village motifs. Often disembodied hands and heads in
profile dominate his work. Sahana says his predilection for straight angular
noses is partly based on the conventions of Greek sculpture. The nose, he
believes, gives power to the face. Jewelry is essential to the figures he
makes. Ornamentation and decoration are signs of joy in life itself.
Sahana sometimes joins several tall narrow panels into
a single column, a monumental free-standing work. More often the
panels are intended for residential settings where subject matter of family,
interdependence and nature is particularly suitable. These pieces have been
installed in homes in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, as well as India. He believes
glass has great potentiality in India in spite of the fact that some still
fear its fragility. Sahana has accepted a great responsibility. He stands at
the beginning of glass sculpture in India, where the tradition of figurative
sculpture in stone, metal and clay has evolved for hundreds of years.
Fortunately, the energy, commitment, and vision of this young artist seem
equal to the challenge.
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Last modified
03:35 PM 03/04/2008