Zainul Abedin
Zainul Abedin (b. 1914, Mymensingh, at that point India, presently Bangladesh; d. 1976) was a painter, social coordinator and teacher who is considered as the establishing figure of Bangladeshi present day workmanship. A Muslim educator of the Calcutta Art School, Abedin moved to East Pakistan (presently Bangladesh) after the parcel of India. Here he built up workmanship training as a major aspect of the state funded educational system and established with others, what is today the Faculty of Fine Arts, Dhaka University. A dissident safeguarding Bengali culture, Abedin was occupied with both the Bengali Language Movement and the Bangladesh Liberation War.
Abedin built up a social pragmatist style, frequently concentrating on battle and enduring as in his acclaimed "Starvation Sketches", which capably archived the Bengal Famine of 1943-1944. He likewise indicated enthusiasm for minimized networks, painting, for instance, the Indigenous Santhal individuals, or outcasts in the Palestinian camps of Syria and Jordan.
Abedin got numerous honors and awards during his life including an Honorary Doctor of Letters degree from the University of Delhi, India (1974). His work is shown in a devoted display at the National Museum of Bangladesh. Bengal Foundation has distributed or co-distributed a few monographs and indexes on his work, among them "Extraordinary Masters of Bangladesh – Zainul Abedin" (Skira, 2012), is the main exhaustive review to date.
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