Dinesh Khemani
Song Booklet of the film Guide, 1965, POP 23998 (Courtesy: Richa and Jamshed Chinoy Collection)
The art of painting posters for film publicity began a decade after the first feature-length film was made in 1913. Since the 1930s hand-painted posters have pervaded the urban landscape (along with small towns in India), featuring arresting images of Hindi cinema stars. Some artists were trained in the Bombay art school, while others learned on the job to paint these posters.
Through this talk, Dinesh Khemani from MAP, will shed light on various aspects of the bygone art of hand-painted film posters, primarily focusing on Bombay Hindi cinema posters. He will delve into the narratives of artists grappling with the accelerating demand to create aesthetic images that draw audiences into the theatre; the complex network of the film publicity business; and the aesthetic sensibility they deployed to create these captivating images. He will also highlight how some of these images may have moved beyond their intended purpose of communication into being seen as art.
Bookings are closed for this event.
Shuttering the Divide: Shaping Nature-Culture Consciousness through Visual Media December 18, 2023
Postcards, History and the Making of Bangalore May 23, 2024
ArtCare – Tips For Family Heritage November 5, 2021
Knot by Knot, Tier by Tier December 13, 2023
Artist Talks August 19, 2024
Animating the Anthropocene April 19, 2022