I discovered him a few years ago when the Sundaram Tagore Gallery did a big show of his work.

The pieces grab your   attention immediately and draw you in, until your nose is right up   against the paper. And they hold you there, mesmorized by the color and texture as you try to figure out   how exactly they were made. The better pieces sell almost instantly, despite the very high  price  tags (some of them are selling for $30,000-50,000 each). But  they're  beautifully composed, and the colors are very well selected.  He's got a  good eye for color and composition.
He makes incisions and holes in thick watercolor paper with a large   nail, sprays the paper with water, and then brushes on dyes of different   colors, letting some soak in, pushing others around.     The result: some stunning, very colorful artwork.

He knows what he's doing, beyond just the making of his art. He   markets himself as a yogi artist-monk-poet and painter, a sort of modern   day Rumi; he claims that he doesn't think while he paints, that his   paintings "result from states of deep meditation, and are informed by   the colors of India" since apparently he clears his mind completely of   all thoughts before beginning each piece.     
But I've seen pictures of his sketchbook, filled with beautiful  sketches articulating in great detail the composition and colors for his future pieces. So he  knows how  to play the art game. And he should- he's been  in the art  world for a long time, and his success is relatively  recent,  considering that he will be 78 this November.     Although he lives in Canada now, he moved to Europe in the 1960s, and   lived there as a struggling artist for about 30 years before hitting it   big, so to speak, despite surprisingly strong connections to the   European art world. So more power to him. I picked up a book of his stuff from Sundaram Tagore, and I found that his art hasn't changed very much in all that   time- he switched gradually from oils on canvas to dyes on paper; the   compositions are a little simpler, a little more geometric- but the way he markets himself has seen significant change.    But that's beside the point: even in his younger days, he had a knack for composition and color. Here are some of his older works, in oil:


    
10/7/10
Sohan Qadri
Labels: color, contemporary, India, Sohan Qadri
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