An Unreasoned Act of Being looks at the career of the draughtsman and sculptor Himmat Shah. Born in Lothal in 1933 to a Jain mercantile family, Shah was a rebellious child who refused to attend
traditional school. He found his vocation at art school and trained under a teacher of Gandhian persuasion. As a founder member of Group 1890, Shah championed contemporary Indian art as
distinct from the influential Paris and New York schools. Nonetheless, he spent two years in Paris, imbibing Western modernism and being exposed to the work of Klee, Brancusi, Picasso and
Giacometti.
Shah's style is instantly recognizable in the totemic and iconic heads that are rather phallic in shape. They are contemplative and embody masculinity rather than portraiture. By applying
techniques used in printmaking, Shah marks the surfaces with grooves and etching, whether the sculpture be in terracotta or bronze. Gayatri Sinha has succeeded in bringing to life a significant
sculptor of twentieth-century Indian art.