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In the company of Gods: Architect Kuldip Singh and his collection of Thanjavur paintings

Architect Kuldip Singh's private collection of Thanjavur paintings is perhaps the largest in India, finds Gargi Gupta

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Two exquisite Thanjavur paintings (Left to Right) Navnita Krishna and Umamaheshvara Nandi, in Delhi-based architect Kuldip Singh’s collection
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Most Delhiwallahs know Kuldip Singh as the architect of the majestic funnel-shaped Palika Kendra building opposite Jantar Mantar, and the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) office in Siri Fort – sometimes called the 'pyjama building' by irreverent auto-wallahs for its two-winged shape. Those more acquainted with architecture will know that Singh is foremost among a band of modernist architects and urban planners – Charles Correa, Raj Rewal, BV Doshi – whose iconic, spare buildings, often clad in exposed concrete, changed the landscape of our cities in the 1960s and 1970s.

Amruta Kalasha, an exhibition of 200-odd vintage Thanjavur paintings at the Kiran Nadar Museum of Art (KNMA) in Delhi, shows a very different facet of Singh's personality — that of an art collector. Singh has been collecting these for over 40 years now, ever since he first discovered them on a trip taken to look for old pillars, sculptures and such-like architectural artefacts in south India.

Over the years, he went back again and again, read up what scholars had written on the subject, and bought hundreds of paintings. 

"Whenever something interesting came up, the artists and dealers in the area knew whom to take it to. After all, I was quite conspicuous in the area," says Singh, referring jokingly to the markers of his Sikh identity. This is the first time the collection is being shown to outsiders.

It is also the first time the KNMA, India's first private museum, is showing a collection that is not its own. "We've never done this before," said Nadar at the show's opening, "but when we saw his collection, I knew it was very important to bring it to the public."

"I suspect that his is the largest (collection of Thanjavur paintings) in India, if not worldwide," says Anna Dallapiccola, Professor of Indian art at the University of Edinburgh, who has collaborated with Singh on a book about his collection to be published by the Marg magazine early next year. Dalapiccola, who has been familiar with the collection for more than two decades, says she is also "deeply impressed by the sustained, high quality of the paintings".

Thanjavur (or Tanjore) painting is a form of religious painting — Hindu gods and goddesses, scenes from the Ramayana and Krishna Leela, are common subjects — that is characterised by the use of rich ornamentation, such as gold leaf and semi-precious stones. Like the pichvais in Rajasthan, these were generally placed in puja rooms in homes and served as a backdrop to sculptures of deities, says Dallapiccola, who has studied the form for the past 40 years.

She adds that the oldest paintings in Singh's collection go back "to the opening years of the 19th century," which is the oldest for these paintings. "We do not have evidence of earlier works, but this does not mean that this genre did not exist before the 19th century."

As a form of indigenous painting, Thanjavur is fairly flourishing, at least compared to others like Warli and Kalamkari, where both clientele and standards of craftsmanship have been diminishing over the years. Singh, a frequent visitor to Tanjore and Chennai, says there are as many as 10,000 artists who practise the art even now. "Art," says Dallapiccola "has to adjust to the times and to the demands of the patrons – the tradition continues, incorporating new elements."

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