Friday, 27 November 2020

Tagore and Croydon’s Art Collection

 

Among the hidden cultural assets not on permanent display display in Croydon  Council’s Museum are 2 drawings by Rabindranath Tagore:  Five Profiles Overlapping and A Head both  in ink on paper.  These were both donated to the Croydon Corporation by the artist in 1935, it being reported on even in The Calcutta Municipal Gazette.

Born in 1861-1941) Tagore was a Bengali poet, musician, painter and thinker who was very influential on poets like Yeats, William Butler and  Robert Bridges, and on Gandhi.

 The 150th Anniversary of his birth in 2011 was commemorated in two ways:

·       Prince Charles unveiled a bust  commissioned by the Tagore Centre UK in Gordon Square.

·       Kings’ College London’s India Institute established the Tagore Centre for Global Thought.

A Tagore Festival was held in the Square in May 2013. The Heritage Lottery Fund  approved funding for the Tagore Centre UK  to start a project celebrating his life.

He visited England in 1912. One of his stories was adapted by George Calderon for the romantic comedy  The Maharani of Arakan performed at the Albert Hall that year and elsewhere in 1913.

In 1913 Thomas Sturge Moore (1870 – 1944), the poet, author and artist, nominated Tagore for the Nobel Prize in literature. Moore has trained at Croydon School of Art. Moore also helped with the publication of various translations of Tagore’s his works.

The Maharani of Arakan was published in 1915, the year of Calderon’s death. It contained a character sketch of Tagore, compiled by K. N. Das Gupta, was illustrated by Clarissa Miles and contained photographs by Walter Benington. Having recovered from his war wounds the British actor Robert Coleman played in the 1916 performance of the play on the London stage.

Tagore returned the knighthood he received in 1915 in protest at the Amritsar Massacre, involving the killing of over 300 Indian civilians by a senior British military officer on 13 April 1919. Amritsar was the holiest city of the Sikhs. He tried to arrange a protest meeting in Calcutta and then renounced his British knighthood as ‘a symbolic act of protest’. 

Tagore was back again in Britain in 1926 and helped found Dartington Hall School. While on a European and US trip in 1930 his paintings were exhibited in London. His works were also displayed in Croydon in 1936.

In 1940 Oxford University arranged a special ceremony in India to honor him  with a Doctorate Of Literature. He died the next year.

A blue plaque was put up to Tagore him at 3 Villas at Hampstead Heath in 1961.

Some of Tagore’s sayings are still relevant today.

·       ‘Don’t limit a child to your own learning, for he was borne in another time.’

·       ‘The highest education is that which not merely give us information but makes our life in harmony with all existence.’

Hopefully the Tagore drawings  will be displayed by the Museum of Croydon along with an exhibition about his life, ideas, and influence,  perhaps in association with the Tagore Centre. 

·       Tagore Centre UK www.tagorecentre.org.uk.

·       The Maharani can be read on-line at: http://archive.org/details/maharaniofarakan00caldiala

 

In a letter in May 1916 D. H. Lawrence, who had previously taught at Davidson School in Croydon,  scorned the writing of Tagore, was contemptuous of Hindus and was clearly an imperialist:

‘I become more and more surprised to see how far higher, in reality, our European civilizations stands than the East, India or Persia ever dreamed of. And one is glad to realize how these Hindus are horribly decadent and reverting to all forms of barbarism in all sorts of ugly ways. We feel surer on our feet, then. But this fraud of looking up to them - this wretched worship-of-Tagore attitude - is disgusting. "Better fifty years of Europe" even as she is. Buddha worship is completely decadent and foul nowadays: and it was always only half civilized.’

Despite these views Lawrence was a friend of  Mulk Raj Anand.

 

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