A MAVERICK PAINTER
KHUSHWANT SINGH
The Telegraph - Calcutta
Saturday, May 06, 2006

Painting by F.N. Souza, oil, 1987 "I was born in Goa in 1924. My
grandmother and grandfather were both chronic drunkards." So begins a
short autobiographical note appended at the end of Francis Newton Souza:
Bridging Western and Indian Modern Art by Aziz Kurtha.  He does not tell
the reader more about himself. His father was a teetotaller who died
early leaving behind a young widow, a daughter who died soon after
himself and Newton. The mother moved to Bombay to earn a living as a
typist and by stitching clothes. Newton learnt how to stitch his
trousers' buttons. He had no training as an artist but he drew obscene
pictures of nude women in school lavatories. His teachers spotted him
because no other boy had the same gift of drawing as he. While still at
school, Newton decided to become an artist despite his aversion to the
smell and look of paint coming of a tube; it reminded him of slimy
serpents.  In 1949, he migrated to London. He had very little money. He
was able to survive because of the bounty of people like the poet
Stephen Spender and Harold Kovnen, who bought everything he painted and
lent him money when he ran out of it. He does not tell us anything about
the women in his life. Apparently, there were quite a few. There was his
Goan wife, who ran a small art shop where she continued to sell her
husband's pictures even after he divorced her. There was his mistress,
Liselotte Kristian, who bore him three daughters without marrying him.
>From the many paintings he made of her, it appears that she must have
been the one real love of his life.  In the book there is one of Lila,
as he called her, in the nude when she was pregnant. It is in water
colour and gouche.  It is one of the most beautiful nudes that I have
ever seen.  He apparently refused to sell it. It is a masterpiece but
its whereabouts are not divulged.

Souza's paintings went through three different phases. To start with,
his themes were Biblical: Madonna and Child, the Last Supper,
Crucifixion, resurrection and so on, then he turned to Hindu iconography
of South Indian bronzes and erotic sculptures of Khajuraho, Konarak and
other temples. Women in these paintings become full bosomed, broad
hipped, with large buttocks. He developed what can be best described as
vulva-fixation, explicitly depicting women's private parts. An element
of lust becomes manifest. During the period finally in Europe he was
exposed to works of European as well as avante-garde painters: Cezanne,
Titian, Courbet, Picasso, the Cubists and Dadaists. Souza combined all
three in his most productive phase to become the pioneer of modern
Indian art.  M.F. Husain recognized him as his mentor. His paintings
were bought by the Tate Gallery and Albert and Victoria museums. He had
one-man exhibitions in London, Paris and New York. On one of his home
visits he was taken ill in Bombay and died on March 28, 2002. He was 78.

Aziz Kurtha is a solicitor practising in Abu Dhabi and London.  He is as
involved in fine arts as in law. Earlier, he published a collection of
erotic drawings left by the calligrapher, Saadquain, who made his living
making artistic versions of the ayats of the holy Quran. He was, at the
same time, a hard drinker and shared Newton Souza's vulva obsession.
With every two drawings, he appended a verse of Urdu poetry composed by
himself in praise of women's pubic hair like an oasis amid sand dunes of
flesh. Kurtha asked me to translate them into English - which I did.

He invited Souza to Abu Dhabi, kept him as a house guest and arranged an
exhibition for him. Souza did not find many buyers for his art. His
paintings of village women is as, if not more powerful, than Amrita
Shergill's. Kurtha has made amends by producing a lavishly illustrated
coffee-tabler of the best of Newton Souza's paintings. It is a veritable
feast for the eyes.

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1060506/asp/opinion/story_6186408.asp

~(^^)~

Avelino

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