Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 29th May 2026, 4:21 PM
The history of arts and culture in Bangladesh contains several individuals whose creative output and structural contributions left an enduring mark. Chief among these figures is Shilpacharya Zainul Abedin. Beyond his individual accomplishments as a painter, Abedin served as a foundational architect of Bengali artistic identity, an investigator of indigenous folklore, and a chronicler of human struggle. His sketches and paintings captured the landscape, population, rivers, socio-economic crises, and political movements of Bengal, transforming real-world experiences into an enduring visual language.
Zainul Abedin was born on 29 December 1914 in the Kishoreganj subdivision of the erstwhile Bengal Presidency during the British Raj. His father served as a police official, providing a stable administrative background for the family. From his early childhood, Abedin demonstrated a deep fascination with the natural environment, rural community structures, and the daily lives of ordinary citizens.
The Brahmaputra River, which flowed near his childhood home, alongside the agrarian life along its banks, exerted a profound influence on his evolving aesthetic sensibility. The changing seasons, the open landscapes, and the physical movements of local workers provided the early thematic imagery that would later define his signature style.
Driven by a resolute passion for drawing and painting, Abedin moved to Calcutta (now Kolkata) in 1933 to seek professional training. He successfully secured admission to the Government School of Art, Calcutta, a premier institution for fine arts in the region. Over the course of five years, he underwent rigorous training in British and European academic art traditions, mastering oil painting, watercolour, and classical sketching techniques.
His technical competence and distinct artistic voice became apparent during his student years. In 1938, while still completing his graduation requirements, Abedin participated in the All India Art Exhibition. His landscape painting titled “Brahmaputra River” won the gold medal. This recognition established his reputation across the subcontinent, marking the entry of a significant new voice into the contemporary art scene of British India.
The defining moment of Abedin’s career came during the devastating Bengal Famine of 1943. The catastrophic event, which resulted in the starvation and death of millions of citizens, completely altered his approach to art. Moving through the streets of Calcutta, he witnessed firsthand the physical devastation, hunger, and societal breakdown affecting rural migrants who had flocked to the city in search of food.
Deeply affected by these harrowing scenes, Abedin produced his historic series of sketches collectively known as the “Famine Sketches” (1943). Operating under acute financial constraints and a lack of standard art supplies, he utilized cheap, coarse packing paper and Chinese black ink, applying it with dry brush strokes and ordinary sticks.
The resulting minimalist, stark lines depicted emaciated human bodies, skeletal mothers protecting dying children, and crows fighting over waste alongside human corpses. These drawings were not merely aesthetic exercises; they served as a raw, undeniable documentation of human suffering and institutional failure. The Famine Sketches garnered widespread international attention, establishing Abedin as a humanist artist committed to documenting the socio-political realities of his people.
Following the partition of British India in 1947, Abedin relocated to Dhaka, the capital of the newly formed province of East Bengal within Pakistan. Recognizing the complete absence of institutional facilities for art education in the region, he took the initiative to establish a dedicated school.
Through his persistent administrative efforts and negotiations with government authorities, the Government Art Institute was successfully founded in 1948 at Johnson Road in Old Dhaka. Abedin was appointed as its first teacher and serving founder-principal, a position of institutional leadership he retained until 1966. Over the decades, this pioneer institution evolved, eventually becoming the Faculty of Fine Arts at the University of Dhaka. His leadership provided the structural foundation for professional art education and the development of modern art movements in East Bengal.
Abedin maintained a lifelong dedication to the preservation of indigenous Bengali folk culture, craftsmanship, and rural traditions. He feared that rapid modernization and political displacement would erode the centuries-old artisanal knowledge of rural communities.
To safeguard this heritage, he designed a comprehensive framework for collecting and archiving traditional arts and crafts. His vision culminated in 1975 when he successfully established the Bangladesh Folk Art and Crafts Foundation in Sonargaon. In tandem with this project, the Zainul Abedin Sangrahashala (a dedicated gallery and archive) was established in Mymensingh to preserve, restore, and display his vast collection of personal artworks for future generations.
Over the course of his lifetime, Abedin produced an expansive body of work comprising more than 3,000 recorded paintings and sketches. His artistic repertoire reflects a transition from rural realism to modern abstraction, while always maintaining a connection to ordinary citizens.
| Notable Artwork | Year of Creation | Medium and Significance |
| Famine Sketches | 1943 | Ink on packing paper; a raw documentation of the historical human catastrophe. |
| The Boat | 1957 | Watercolour and ink; captures the dynamic labor and physical motion of rural boatmen. |
| Struggle (Sangram) | 1959 | Oil on canvas; depicts a powerful bull pulling a heavily laden cart, symbolizing human resilience. |
| Nabanna (Harvest) | 1969 | A monumental 65-foot-long scroll painting detailing rural life, agricultural joy, and celebration. |
| Monpura ’70 | 1974 | A 30-foot-long scroll painting commemorating the tragic victims of the catastrophic 1970 Bhola cyclone. |
| The Freedom Fighter | 1971 | Sketches capturing the armed resistance and determination of citizens during the Liberation War. |
| Madonna | Undated | Drawings celebrating motherhood amidst challenging socio-economic conditions. |
The massive scroll paintings, specifically Nabanna and Monpura ’70, are widely regarded as masterpieces of South Asian modernism, presenting a narrative epic of the resilience, tragedies, and cyclical nature of Bengali life.
In recognition of his extraordinary contributions to the cultural landscape and art education, the Government of Bangladesh bestowed upon him the prestigious title of National Professor in 1974. He became popularly known by the honorific title of Shilpacharya, meaning “Great Teacher of Art,” a term that reflected his dual legacy as an artist and an institution builder.
The artist passed away on 29 May 1976 after a battle with lung cancer. He was buried on the grounds of the University of Dhaka, adjacent to the Central Mosque and steps away from the Faculty of Fine Arts that he had founded.
Zainul Abedin redefined the role of an artist within Bengali society. He rejected the notion that fine art should exist purely for aesthetic pleasure or aristocratic decoration. Instead, he repositioned it as a vital mirror for societal realities, economic struggles, and political aspirations. His work successfully combined indigenous folk forms with western academic techniques, creating a visual vocabulary that celebrated the beauty of the delta landscape while giving a voice to its most marginalized populations. His institutional structures and aesthetic philosophies continue to shape artistic training and cultural identity across the region.
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