Bireswar Sen

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Born15 November 1897[1]
Kolkata (then Calcutta), India
Died10 September 1974
OccupationsPainter, teacher, writer
Bireswar Sen
Born15 November 1897[1]
Kolkata (then Calcutta), India
Died10 September 1974
EducationPresidency College, Calcutta
OccupationsPainter, teacher, writer

Bireswar Sen (1897–1974) was an Indian painter, writer, and teacher, who was influenced by the Bengal School of Art and Western modernism, but then later developed a unique visual language of miniatures. He depicted grand landscapes, mostly featuring the Himalayas, on paintings measuring smaller than postcards.[2] Sen was popular and celebrated during his lifetime, but faded from public consciousness after his death.[3]

However, there has been an increasing interest in his oeuvre, since the noted art historian B. N. Goswamy curated an exhibition of his works, titled Heaven and Earth: Himalayas and the Art of Bireswar Sen, at the National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi in 2010.[4]

Sen was born in Kolkata (then Calcutta), British India, to Rai Bahadur Saileswar Sen, a professor of literature at Calcutta University, and Niharnalini Sen.[5] He took up painting and drawing when young, but didn't pursue art formally. He went to Presidency College, Calcutta, where he received an MA in English literature in 1921.

Portrait sketch of Bireswar Sen by L. M. Sen, published in Modern Review (1928)

Career

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