Skip to content
Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
₹0.00 0 Cart
  • Home
  • Artists
  • Exhibitions
    • Current Gallery Exhibition
    • Past Exhibitions
  • Upcoming Exhibitions
  • CIMA Design
  • About CIMA
  • News & Events
    • Events
    • Conversations & Videos
  • Purchase Online
    • Buy Art work
    • Publication
  • Home
  • Artists
  • Exhibitions
    • Current Gallery Exhibition
    • Past Exhibitions
  • Upcoming Exhibitions
  • CIMA Design
  • About CIMA
  • News & Events
    • Events
    • Conversations & Videos
  • Purchase Online
    • Buy Art work
    • Publication
Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
₹0.00 0 Cart

Farhad Hussain

Farhad Hussain’s (b. 1975) paintings are like booby-trapped toys. Their vibrant colours, happy people and beaming smiles welcome the innocent viewer; their disarmingly simple figuration, their “ideal family” narrative, their palpable brightness seem to be just what the art teacher recommended for the uninitiated young. But as the viewer goes up close, he starts to feel uneasy. The innocuous turns insidious. For, isn’t there something unreal about them, something not quite right?

Aren’t the colours a little too vibrant, the people a little too showily happy, their smiles a little too beaming? Isn’t there something slightly diabolical about the brightness? It’s a brightness without shadows. The kind that boxes in a prisoner. In Hussain’s paintings, you get the feeling that a show may be on, or a film shoot, with lights and cameras trained on a carefully-blocked freeze where actors pose with artificial smiles on cue.

The work on view adds something interesting to his usual family scenes. If his depiction suggests that Muslims and Sikhs-and maybe Hindus-share a communal bonhomie, so do, in their own way, animals. The visitor sees this in the apparent misalliance of a fox and a dog who seem quite happy with each other. Hussain also adds music to the scene, a drum that the painted boys are playing.

On the surface, it’s the prescription of the Indian Constitution: different communities making music together. A kind of poster togetherness. But the slightly farcical edge to the gestures and the hint of a frenzy in the beating of the drum works up a low undertone of, yes, menace

Artist Artwork

Loading...

Untitled

AM/1377

View Artwork

Artist Artwork

Loading...

Untitled

P/4353

View Artwork

Untitled

4354

View Artwork

Quanta - 13

4112

View Artwork

Untitled

C/N-P-4114 (A,B)

View Artwork

Sign up to our

Newsletter

Join our mailing list for exclusive discounts, the latest art news, artist updates and more.

Contact

Sunny Towers
43 Ashutosh Chowdhury Avenue
Kolkata 700 019 India

  • (91) 33 2485 8717 / 2485 8509
  • (91) 33 2485 8463
  • cima.gallery2011@gmail.com
Links

Artists
Publication
Cima Design
About CIMA

Exhibitions

Current Gallery Exhibition
Online Exhibition
Past Exhibitions
Upcoming Exhibitions
Viewing Room

News & Events

Events
Conversations & Videos

Purchase Online

Purchase Art work
Purchase Publication

Help

Contact Us

Policy

Terms and Conditions

Account

My Account
View Cart
Checkout

Open Hours
Mondays: 3 pm – 7 pm Tuesdays to Saturdays:
11 am – 7 pm Sundays & Public Holidays: Closed
Connect
Facebook-f Instagram X-twitter

© 2025 CIMA Gallery Pvt. Ltd. / All Rights Reserved / Design & Development: BASE 33

  • Home
  • Artists
  • Exhibitions
    • Current Gallery Exhibition
    • Past Exhibitions
  • Upcoming Exhibitions
  • CIMA Design
  • About CIMA
  • News & Events
    • Events
    • Conversations & Videos
  • Purchase Online
    • Buy Art work
    • Publication
Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube