. . . . . . . . "15040"^^ . . "Sudip Roy"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Roy in his studio"@en . . . . . "Indian"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Baharampur, West Bengal"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "49013747"^^ . . . "Sudip Roy (Bengali: \u09B8\u09C1\u09A6\u09C0\u09AA \u09B0\u09BE\u09AF\u09BC) is an Indian artist, pursuing arts in the Government College of Art & Craft, Kolkata. Works of Sudip Roy includes pencil sketches and water colours, charcoals and a heady series of landscape done in limped line drawing. Roy over the years mastered the art of water colour and moved from landscapes to studies of architectural facades and association of people in historic temples and monuments. He moved to the capital city of Delhi in the mid-1990s. His subjects remained architectural and figurative for the most part of his life until he shifted to moody momentousness. He started doing large abstracted works which reflected the times of the day. Voluminous sweeps of colour, drawing concurrently on still perceptions, with a light hand and the melodious design of colour's vapid vacuous tonality, these works are, as if, Sudip's encounter with the history of realism, abandoning and reconciling into the magic of Abstract Expressionism. His work of art overlaps maximal instincts as well as expressionist paintings. He discards an insistent flatness in favour of three-dimensionality, turning from the canvas to a series of densely coloured fragments delineated by strong contours."@en . . . . . "1121895524"^^ . "October 1960"@en . . . . . . . "Sudip Roy"@en . . "The 'Lorenzo il Magnifico' Award"@en . . . . . "Sudip Roy"@en . . . . . "Charulata, Benaras, Krishna, Time series, Durga, Sadhu, Monkey"@en . . "Sudip Roy (Bengali: \u09B8\u09C1\u09A6\u09C0\u09AA \u09B0\u09BE\u09AF\u09BC) is an Indian artist, pursuing arts in the Government College of Art & Craft, Kolkata. Works of Sudip Roy includes pencil sketches and water colours, charcoals and a heady series of landscape done in limped line drawing. Roy over the years mastered the art of water colour and moved from landscapes to studies of architectural facades and association of people in historic temples and monuments. He moved to the capital city of Delhi in the mid-1990s."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .