Amit Ambalal
(b.1943)Born in Ahmedabad, Amit Ambalal was a businessman, until he became a full-time painter in 1979.
He schooled at a school
founded and run by Leela Sarabhai.
But coming from a business family, art wasn't quite appreciated by all the
members of his family and he was forced to pursue a formal education. Ambalal
eventually graduated from the Ahmedabad University with a BA, B.Com. and LL.B.
He soon joined his father's business and took over as the Managing Director.
Even as the MD of a company, Ambalal saved his Sundays for the paint and easel
and worked with his guru, Chhaganlal Jadav.
His work can basically be divided into two categories. One has a contemporary
approach to tradition via the popular religious traditions. And the other is the
historical Rajasthani Nathdwara devotional paintings he has been creating for
the last 14 years now. Part of his work also revolves around human drama.
A prosperous society embedded in a destitute society is thus often the focus of
his work. His portraits of India are simple and a direct means of him coming to
terms with the horror he sees around him. He has a unique ability of perceiving
quirks and flaws in human behavior and making them part of his great pictorial
scheme on canvas. Its often been noticed in his canvases that where his faces,
body and gestures are devices of his irony, it's the color, design and texture
that gives his paintings the light and easy mood.
Hypocrisy doesn't bother him, he prefers to splash it on canvas and mock the
world thus. Says he, "I don't decide what to paint before hand, the initial idea
may be from a newspaper photograph I have seen in the morning or an antique
sculpture. Then as I am painting something starts to grow inside that canvas,
and that takes on the final form on the canvas."
Be it historical or contemporary, his work is paired with the critical,
irreverent humorist creating a satirical representation of the everyday and the
divine, filled with eccentric human and animal protagonists.
A large part of Amit's work is in watercolors and this he explains by his
fondness for the medium, says he, "Watercolors have a knack of telling you when
the painting is complete, apart from its luminosity and transparency which is
not seen in other mediums." Amit is known to work with pure colors and let them
mingle on the paper rather than his color palette.
Ambalal's first solo exhibition was in Ahmedabad in 1980. Since then he has had
several shows around India, and in several group exhibitions abroad. Even after
a track record of over 40 solo and group shows, he still considers himself to be
a student. "After a show is over, I feel I have something more to learn," he
says.