
        
      Highlighting childhood nostalgia
        Babul Mahmood's solo painting exhibition in Toronto
Takir Hossain
  
  The Daily Star, Dhaka, Wednesday,   November 21, 2012 
Under the title  “Nostalgia and Reality”, Toronto Public Library in Don Mills, Canada has  organised a solo painting exhibition, featuring the works of Bangladeshi  expatriate painter Babul Mahmood. The exhibition was inaugurated recently and  will continue till November 30. This is his sixth solo painting exhibition.
        
        Babul's paintings  feature bold colours, forms of different objects like kite, spinning top  (Latim), fish and natai. Strong brush strokes and subtle expression of spirit  are also two significant traits of his paintings. He is an experimental painter  and has identified himself inextricably with the cultural heritage of Bangladesh.
        
        The artist told The  Daily Star over the telephone, “All the way through my journey as an artist, I  have concentrated on themes like childhood dreams, the underwater world and  diverse social calamities. Childhood nostalgia is one of my beloved subjects.
        
        “My 'Underwater World'  series inspired me when I visited Saint Martin's Island. I discover a joyful  and free-roaming life under water. I strive to represent the vibrant life of  small fish, green shrubbery and unknown foliage all in the watery world.”
        
        Emerald green, crimson,  azure, black, yellow, white and red are used predominantly, giving a fascinating  approach to Babul's paintings. The strong backgrounds give the viewers a  romantic and imposing view.
        
        The painter cherishes  childhood nostalgia, when life was carefree and everything was possible.  Spinning top and flying kites were part of that passion. He has concentrated on  the theme of childhood and has tried to capture the theme in different forms,  colours and shapes. Adroit application of light and shade are evident  accomplishments, besides restless curves, round-square forms, rectangular-triangular  and broken lines. This is because playing with forms is the foremost aspect of  Babul's works.
        
        Babul considers pure  colour to be the most effective way to express emotions and sensitivity. He  believes that colour approaches the soul directly and is able to induce  profound emotions in the viewer. He applies his colours meticulously, in thin  layers, and reduces the texture of the paint to its most minimal state.
        
        Babul graduated from  the Institute of Fine Arts, University of Dhaka (now Faculty of Fine  Arts) in 1991. A Masters in Visual arts in Painting from Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, India, he has held solo  exhibitions in England, Canada and Bangladesh. He took part in major  group exhibitions in France, Canada, Nepal, England, South Africa, India, Australia and other countries.
        
        
        
        
          
        Toronto through the eyes of Babul Mahmood
        The Daily Star, Wednesday, October 5, 2011    
        Staff Correspondent 
        Bangladeshi painter Babul Mahmood now lives and works in Toronto. Besides being a  painter, he is also an able photographer. Several years ago, Mahmood left the  country for higher education in Graphic Design, in Toronto. His images convey his  eagerness to capture the welcoming and fascinating facets of Toronto. He has wandered  through the city, taking pictures of its vibrant cultural diversity. Mahmood  has focused on architecture, arts, cultural-social festivals, and everyday life  in the city.
          
          The photographer seems to be constantly in search of aesthetic  frames. According to him: "I'm not just documenting things. I'm really  trying to understand what the people are like, what their lives are like, and  trying to portray that as much as I can in the photographs. I'm surprised by  the city's sublime, charming, and yet whimsical atmosphere."
          
          The search for aesthetics is evident in the photographs. Light  and shade have been used commendably in his photos. The photographer is  seemingly an expert in using natural light to create images that are easy on  the eye. Mahmood's photos are bright and lively. He demonstrates his technique  in some photographs.
          
        The exhibition features Toronto's magnificent lakeside  park, innovative architecture, sculptures, galleries, theatres, museums, concert  halls, public recreation centre, and everyday life in the cosmopolitan city.  Bright sky, falling snow, and crimson sun are also in focus. Some of his images  show people on the streets of Toronto, common chaos and  relaxation at the caf�s. These photos were shot at several locations in the city.
        
        
        
  
  Takir  Hossain
  
The Daily Star, Dhaka, Sunday, August 31, 2008 
  
      Bold   colours, novel technique, meticulous  adherence to brush stroke, subtle   expression of spirit and clear perception are  the main aspects of   Babul Mahmood's paintings. He is one of the budding  painters and has   identified himself inextricably with the cultural heritage of   Bangladesh. Babul's  experimentation with technique marks the beginning   of a timeless voyage of an  innovative exploration. 
        
        Babul is a true narrator of our social, cultural and natural   milieu. He is  among those promising artists of Bangladesh who has   developed a  distinctly individual style. 
  
        Babul Mahmood cherishes childhood nostalgia, when life was   carefree and  anything could be done. Spinning latim and flying kites   were part of that  passion. A poet once said that what a child “is”,   foreshadows what he will  accomplish in future. Consequently, it is   clear those days can surface in an  artistic work, blending truth and   beauty in a sensational manner that can  invite us to bask in the   enjoyment of such exciting creative expressions. 
  
        Babul has concentrated on the theme of childhood and has tried   to capture the  theme in different forms, colours and shapes. Adroit   application of light and  shades are evident accomplishments, besides   restless curves, round-square  forms, rectangular-triangular lines and   broken lines. This is because playing  with forms is a foremost part of   Babul's works. His application of paint is  also singular and   distinctive.
  
        Use of bright colours is another unique feature of Babul's   paintings. In his  use of colours, Babul frequently goes for vital   colours from our natural world.  It is not a rare sight in his paintings   to find the original forms being split  and summoned up in a new garb,   an interpretation that permits working over a  wide range of themes.   Some of his paintings blissfully project the serene  ambience of nature   of Bangladesh. The colours  involved are azure, scarlet, black and   emerald green, representing Mother  Nature in torrential colours and   scenic depiction. Babul has taken the simple  and general subjects of   our surroundings and presented them in uncommon style  that gives a deep   expression of semi-abstraction and abstraction. 
  
        As a painter, he thinks he has some responsibility to the motherland. 
  
        Babul Mahmood's solo painting exhibition will begin soon in Toronto, Canada.
        
        
        
        
  
      
      
        Reminiscences  on canvas
          Takir  Hossain
        
          Dhaka Courier, July 10, 2008
          
         
        Vigorous   colour, technique, strong stroke  and imagery are the components that   beautiful paintings are made of and Babul  Mahmood, a burgeoning painter   who has been trying to contribute to our art  arena with his passion   and clear perception. A thought-provoking and  imaginative painter,   Babul is always searching in his voyages through the vast  diverse ocean   of nature for enriching his works.
          
          Babul has identified himself inextricably with the cultural heritage of   the  soil. His central philosophy is that he is a Bengali by birth; has   grown up and  developed in an environment shaped by the wind and water   of Bengal. Babul's experimentation with technique marks  the beginning   of a timeless voyage of an innovative exploration. 
          Babul is a true narrator of our social, cultural and natural milieu in   our  country. He is among those few budding painters of Bangladesh who   has a distinctly individual inventive  style. 
          
          Babul Mahmood cherishes sinking in deep childhood nostalgia, when life   was free  and anything could be done. Spinning tops and flying kites   were part of that  passion. That is why a Romantic Poet pronounced that   what a child  "is" foreshadows what he will accomplish in future.   Consequently, it  is clear those days can surface in an artistic work,   blending truth and beauty  in a sensational manner that can invite us to   bask in the enjoyment of such  exciting creative expressions. Babul has   concentrated on the theme of childhood  and has tried to capture the   theme in different forms, colours and shapes.  Adroit application of   light and shades are evident accomplishments, besides  restless curves,   round-square forms, rectangular-triangular lines and broken  lines. This   is because playing with forms is a foremost part of Babul's works.    Babul likes to work in bold brush strokes, vibrant colours, light and   shade  that mark off his objects and forms from the surrounding space.   His application  of paint is also singular and distinctive. Babul is   more and more imparting  messages through his paintings and he is   becoming more innovative, using his  space to increasingly interact with   his forms and objects.
          
          Use of bright colours is another unique feature of Babul's paintings. In   his  use of colours, Babul frequently goes for vital colours from our   natural world.  It is not a rare sight in his paintings to find the   original forms being split  and summoned up in a new garb, an   interpretation that permits working over a  wide range of themes. Some   of his paintings blissfully project the serene  ambience of his current   living place in Toronto. The colours involved are azure, scarlet, black    and emerald green, representing Mother Nature in torrential colours and   scenic  depiction. Babul's canvases really prove his superb grasp of   the aesthetic  thinking process and the work reveals authentic adoration   of natural world.  Babul has taken the simple and general subjects of   our surroundings and presented  them in uncommon style that gives a deep   expression of semi-abstraction and  abstraction. 
          
          Among the sophisticated charismatic painters of the time, who in fact   try to  represent our glorious culture, heritage and tradition, Babul   Mahmood is the  most focused on aesthetic purposes. As a painter, he   thinks he has some  responsibility to the motherland, where he and his   fourth generation were born.
         
        
        
        
  
        
       
      Luminous colours on canvas
      Md. Takir Hossain 
      The Daily Independent 
        Dhaka , Friday April 29, 2005 
      “My   sense of drawing developed before I know the alphabet. When I was three   or four years old, I was drawing with sticks on the soft earth of my   “Uthan” (yard). As I grow to boyhood, I decided that I would be a full   fledged artist. My aim in life was to study at the Fine Arts Institute   of the University of Dhaka , where I appeared for my only admission   interview. I was not interested in any field of study. But it is very   difficult in our society to survive solely as a freelance painter. Which   is why I had to chose another job, like many others. However, I have   not given up my painting career. 
      In   this exhibition as in my previous solo and group exhibitions, my   childhood or the childhood of my generation, my environmental reality   and that of Nature have been presented. In my work, I have always tried   to look for my “self”, my identity – for what is truly my own: my   civilization, my culture and my past. I firmly believe that we have a   unique heritage that can be used in our creative work in many ways   without having to intimate the west.” 
      Rare   is the person who does not like to reminisce about his or her childhood   days. Those days are very significant in every human life – and often   memory thrives on a wealth of scenic and panoramic events that give our   early memories their freshness. Babul Mahmood cherishes sinking in deep   childhood nostalgia, when life was free and anything could be done.   Spinning tops and flying kits were part of that passion. That is why   Romantic Poet pronounced that what a child “is” foreshadows what he will   accomplish in future. Consequently, it is clear those days can surface   in an artistic work, blending truth and beauty in a sensational manner   that can invite us to bask in the enjoyment of such exciting creative   expansions. Babul has concentrated on the them of childhood and has   tried to capture the theme in different forms, colours and shapes.   Adroit application of light and shades are evident accomplishments,   besides restless curves, round-square forms, rectangular-triangular   lines and broken lines. This is because playing with forms is a foremost   part of Babul's works. 
      Use   of bright colors is another unique feature of Babul's paintings. In his   use of colours, Babul frequently goes for vital colours from our   natural world. It is not a rare sight in his paintings to fiend the   original forms being split and summoned up in a new grab, an   interpretation that permits working over a wide range of themes.   “Underwater World” is a series of works in this solo exhibition, where   Babul focuses on small fishes, middle-sized fishes, green shrubbery and   unknown foliage – all in the watery world, specially in the depths of   the seas surrounding St Martin 's Island – one of the great natural   assets of our country. 
      Some   of his paintings blissfully project the serene ambience of the island.   The colours involved are azure, scarlet, black and emerald green,   representing Mother Nature in torrential colours and scenic depiction.   Babul's Canvases really prove his superb grasp of the aesthetic thinking   process and the work reveals authentic adoration of our natural world. 
      Babul   has taken the simple and general subjects of our surroundings and   presented them in uncommon style that gives a deep expression of semi   abstraction. 
      Babul   is very anxious about the present state of the world “Stop   Genocide-Iraq” is a series of works were pins, were and nylon nets have   been used as medium for indicating the inhuman and callous life   persisting in our world even in the Third Millennium. Expending various   themes along with novel image bring to his work a conscious use of the   medium, allowing the work to gain in lucidity. The attention-grabbing   and eloquent appearance of Babul's works reflects that here is a   painter, who is a man of passion and sensitive feelings. By comparing   his former works with the recent one being shown in this exhibition, we   can discern that he seems to be in search of finding his way to the   right destination. This is an endeavour he seems to have been engaged in   since the beginning of his creative odyssey as an artist. He adores to   limn the various image, steeped in bright colours, in semi-abstract   style and vivid realistic expression. 
      Some   of his works depict our Language Movement, in a series of works done in   acrylic and water on paper. The bangle alphabet, different lines and   symbolic forms in semi-abstract way is visible in this work.   International Mother Language Day is an honour bestowed by the   international community on the Language Movement of Bangladesh. The   recognition of this day serve not only to encourage linguistic diversity   and multilingual education but also helps to develop a fuller awareness   of linguistics and cultural traditions throughout the world and to   inspire international solidarity based on understanding, tolerance and   dialogue. 
      Among   the avant-garde charismatic painter of this decade, who in fact try to   represent our glorious culture, heritage and tradition, Babul Mahmood is   the most focused on aesthetic purposes. As a painter, he things he has   some responsibility to the motherland, where he and his fourth   generation were born. 
      Last   Sunday, the Russian Cultural Centre organized the 4th solo painting   exhibition of Babul Mahmood. This exhibition will continue up to 30 th   April. He is also a photographer. In 1996, he got special Award for   stage decoration at Banaras Hindu University , India and in 1991, he   also gained Photography Award from Bangladesh Photographic Society,   Dhaka , Bangladesh. 
      
        
        
        
  
      Babul's buoyant world of whirling images 
        Fayza Haq 
  
  The Daily Star
        Dhaka, Wesnesday April 27, 2005 
      Babul   Mahmood's buoyant acrylic, watercolour and mixed media works are on   display at an exhibition at the Russian Science and Culture Centre. He   has continued with his acrylic work, and gone on to do watercolour, and   more mixed media to express his unique emotions and experiences. Apart   from earning a living as an art expert with a local firm, Babul works by   night to best express himself. 
      In   his mixed media work on Iraq and the Language Movement, Babul says, "An   artist in Bangladesh, like myself, cannot take up arms against any   powerful country waging a war. I can, however, show my protest.   Similarly, I've idealised the martyred hundreds in 1952. In the   watercolours, I've delineated my recent adventures and experiences at St   Martin's Island, in the south of Bangladesh. This includes underwater   diving during the full moon." 
      Babul   has continued with his theme of nostalgia for his childhood days in his   acrylics as he feels that childhood in his time, 30 years ago, was   quite different from that of the present day Dhaka child -- cooped up in   the urban existence of claustrophobic flats. "Even the parks and   playgrounds of the schools, where children play, are limited in number   and space or are non-existent. We've enjoyed large expanses of the   countryside during my holidays. Today children do have vacations, but   often that time off from school is crammed into TV viewing or book   reading," he says. That is why he has repeated the images of the   whirling tops and the flying, gliding kites, and the spools of threads.   In search of a dramatic impact, he has gone in for contrasting loud   colours. 
      Babul   makes sketches of his works, and plans them out as he goes about his   routine daytime profession. As the sun sets he begins painting. This is   not just for the extra buck. He invests the earning from his exhibitions   to buy more art equipment. "Urban existence in Dhaka is such that it is   difficult to survive without an added income," Babul comments. 
      In   the mixed media work are metal nails, wire netting, small cloth- and   -wool dolls, and tiny wooden houses. These lend a new angle to Babul's   works since his last flamboyant one at the Indian Cultural Centre. The   swimming fish, coral, sand and sea representations in his St. Martin's   Island portrayal capture the snoozing underwater world -- which local   artists and photographers have diligently and cleverly covered over the   last five years. 
      Babul   did his Bachelors in Fine Arts from the Institute of Fine Arts, before   proceeding to the Banaras University, through an Indian cultural   exchange scholarship. Here he had some of the crème de la crème Indian   art teachers. He began exhibiting his works in Banaras, as a student. He   has, so far, taken part in more than 25 exhibitions at home and abroad   -- including the displays at Kolkata, at the national competitions of   the Shilpakala Academy, and those organised by the Institute of Fine   Arts, DU (1985-1995). 
      
      
        
        
        
  
  Mahmood's exhibition tells the tale of humankind
          Nafiza Dawala          
        
      
The New Nation
        Dhaka, Wesnesday April 27, 2005 
      Social   problem is an integral part of every human being, young or old. It is   such a thing that even two strangers begin conversation between them in   the hope that a solution may be found through it. And when these   problems are coupled with the subject of painting, an entirely different   and unique image is created. 
      This   is exactly what artist Babul Mahmood has tried to do. He has taken one   of the most identifiable problems from each part of our life of home and   abroad. For instance, childhood and stop the genocide on which he has   worked reflect his different traits and futures. His exhibition now   underway at Russian cultural center close on April 30. 
      From   paintings on issues like Iraq and then shifting on to other aspects,   this wasn't an instant change. It was gradual process undertaken after a   lot and research and efforts. Babul Mahmood is holding the solo show   after two years. And his efforts have borne fruit, in view of people's   tremendous response. 
      The   artist presents sixty paintings with three series work, including   Childhood, Stop the genocide: Iraq and Underwater. The artist's themes   are simple and artistic. One of his series work childhood, is tale of   the experiences a child gathered. City life is full of restlessness;   there is no security, no pace and no proper atmosphere to rear a child. 
      The   artist believes that a child who cannot see the expanse of field and   sky, bathe off pond and climb of trees, cannot grow full dimensions of   mind and heart that makes the human being hole. These are the causes of   his frustrations, and the sparks behind his work. These series are also a   protest against cramped spaces in modern living conditions that limit   the development of heart and mind. 
      His   other series work titled ”Stop the genocide: Iraq's work representing   his thought about recent development in Iraq. Talking about his working   styles perhaps one may safely say that some of his works are   semi-abstract, and some of impressionistic. This is true in case of   “Under-water” series inspired by his recent visit to St. Martin's   island. Those vibrant splashes of color in red and orange more the   representation of joy in abstract from a joy of living he discovered in   the free-rooming animals like fish, planet, sea snail and in the   simple-minded people who have made St. Martin island inhabitable. 
      All   age groups and generations have turned up to view his works. This idea   has made people, not necessarily art lovers, to come closer to   paintings. 
      Think   about his work, he said, “In my work, I have always tried to look for   myself, for what is truly my own, my civilization, my culture and my   past. I firmly believe that we have a heritage of unique belonging that   we can use in our creative work in many ways without having to imitate   the west. The paintings reflect the innermost feelings of the artist who   have held numerous exhibition earlier. The artist work's are exhibited   in the exhibition, is in acrylic, watercolour and mixed media. 
      A   self-thought artist, Mahmood has graduated in Fine Arts from Banaras   Hindu University, India and Institute of Fine Arts, University of Dhaka,   Bangladesh. He has had also some other creative qualifications like   Photography, Digital Video Editing, Web designing and many others.   Presently, he has been working as a Motion Photographer and Video Editor   at multimedia department in Beximco Pharmaceuticals Ltd. 
      
      
        
        
        
  
  Reminiscences on canvas 
    By M. T. H. 
      The New Nation
        Weekend Plus
        Dhaka, Thursday April 28, 2005
      Rare   is the person who does not like to reminisce about his or her childhood   days. Those days are very significant in every human life - and often   memory thrives on a wealth of scenic and panoramic events that give our   early memories their freshness. Babul Mahmood cherishes sinking in deep   childhood nostalgia, when life was free and anything could be done.   Spinning tops and flying kites were part of that passion. That is why a   Romantic Poet pronounced that what a child "is" foreshadows what he will   accomplish in future. Consequently, it is clear those days can surface   in an artistic work, blending truth and beauty in a sensational manner   that can invite us to bask in the enjoyment of such exciting creative   expressions. Babul has concentrated on the theme of childhood and has   tried to capture the theme in different forms, colours and shapes.   Adroit application of light and shades are evident accomplishments,   besides restless curves, round-square forms, rectangular-triangular   lines and broken lines. This is because playing with forms is a foremost   part of Babul's works. 
        
        Use of bright colours is another unique feature of Babul's paintings.   In his use of colours, Babul frequently goes for vital colours from our   natural world. It is not a rare sight in his paintings to find the   original forms being split and summoned up in a new garb, an   interpretation that permits working over a wide range of themes. "Under   Water World" is a series of works in this solo exhibition, where Babul   focuses on small fishes, middle-sized fishes, green shrubbery and   unknown foliage - all in the watery world, specially in the depths of   the seas surrounding St Martin's Island - one of the great natural   assets of our country. 
  
        Some of his paintings blissfully project the serene ambience of the   island. The colours involved are azure, scarlet, black and emerald   green, representing Mother Nature in torrential colours and scenic   depiction. Babul's canvases really prove his superb grasp of the   aesthetic thinking process and the work reveals authentic adoration of   our natural world. 
  
        Babul has taken the simple and general subjects of our surroundings   and presented them in uncommon style that gives a deep expression of   semi-abstraction. 
  
        Babul is very anxious about the present state of the world. "Stop   Genocide-Iraq" is a series of works where pins, wires and nylon nets   have been used as medium for indicating the inhuman and callous life   persisting in our world even in the Third Millennium. Expanding various   themes along with novel images bring to his works a conscious use of the   medium, allowing the work to gain in lucidity. The attention-grabbing   and eloquent appearance of Babul's works reflects that here is a   painter, who is a man of passion and sensitive feelings. By comparing   his former works with the recent one being shown in this exhibition, we   can discern that he seems to be in search of finding his way to the   right destination. This is an endeavour he seems to have been engaged in   since the beginning of his creative odyssey as an artist. He adores to   limn the various images, steeped in bright colours, in semi-abstract   style and vivid realistic expression. 
  
        Some of his works depict our Language Movement, in a series of works   done in acrylic and water on paper. The Bangla alphabet, different lines   and symbolic forms in semi-abstract way is visible in this work.   International Mother Language Day is an honour bestowed by the   international community on the Language Movement of Bangladesh. The   recognition of this day serves not only to encourage linguistic   diversity and multilingual education but also helps to develop a fuller   awareness of linguistic and cultural traditions throughout the world and   to inspire international solidarity based on understanding, tolerance   and dialogue. 
  
        Among the avant-garde charismatic painters of this decade, who in fact   try to represent our glorious culture, heritage and tradition, Babul   Mahmood is the most focused on aesthetic purposes. As a painter, he   thinks he has some responsibility to the motherland, where he and his   fourth generation were born. 
  
  "My sagacity of drawing developed before I knew the alphabet. When I was   three or four years old, I was drawing with sticks on the soft earth of   my "uthon" (yard). As I grew to boyhood, I intended that I would be a   full-fledged artist. My aim in life was to study at the Fine Arts   Institute of the University of Dhaka, where I appeared for my only   admission interview. I was not interested in any field of study. But it   is very difficult in our society to survive solely as s free-lance   painter. Which is why I had to choose another job, like many others.   However, I have not given up my painting career. 
  
        In this exhibition as in my previous solo and group exhibitions, my   childhood or the childhood of my generation, my environmental reality   and that of Nature have been presented. In my work, I have always tried   to look for my "Self", my identity - for what is truly my own: my   civilisation, my culture and my past. I firmly believe that we have a   unique heritage that can be used in our creative work in many ways   without having to imitate the West." Expressed Babul Mahmood. 
  
        Last Sunday, the Russian Cultural Centre organised the 4th solo   painting exhibition of this promising painter. This exhibition will   continue upto 30th April. He is also a photographer. In 1996, he got   Special Award for stage decoration at Benares Hindu University, India   and in 1991, he also gained Photography Award from Bangladesh   Photographic Society, Dhaka.
        
        
        Babul Mahmood's solo painting exhibition
        Robab Rosan 
  
  The New Age
        Dhaka, Wednesday April 27, 2005 
      Babul   Mahmood's fourth painting exhibition is being held at the Russian   Centre for Science and Culture in Dhanmondi from April 24. The   exhibition will remain open from 4:00pm to 7:30pm till April 30. 
        
        Babul Mahmood, who had his Bachelors degree in drawing and painting   from the Institute of Fine Art of the Dhaka University in 1989, got a   scholarship to Banaras Hindu University in 1995, under the Indian   Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) where he did a Masters degree in   Creative Painting. 
  
        Sixty of his paintings, done in the last three years, are being   displayed in the exhibition. In the serie, Stop the Genocide, the   painter has presented the sufferings of the common people in Iraq. 'I   have expressed my protest against war through my paintings, a war which   was started, defying all international outcries. I have protested   against the destruction of the relics of the ancient civilization in   Iraq.' 
  
        Using acrylic, Mahmood has painted barbed-wire, images of children and   symbols of dead bodies. He has used dots of red colour to depict   bloodshed. 
  
        In his Childhood series, has used symbols of kites and latim (tops).   'Recalling my childhood memory I have used these images in my canvas. I   think kites are synonymous with the sky, just as tops are with earth. I   have tried to present both the fertility of the earth and the vastness   of the sky.' His works, done in a semi abstract style, are both in   watercolour and acrylic. 
  
        The series of the Underwater World, Mahmood has portrayed calm and   colourful images of the flora and fauna in the sea. 'I can feel the free   movement of fishes in schools and other living creatures in the   underwater world. I try to depict the colours of the sea.' His   Underwater World-1 and Underwater World-2 present the water in Prussian   blue and fauna in black. The colours are very eye-soothing and   appealing. The painter has also used many other hues in this series. 
  
        Mahmood has portrayed the recent catastrophic disaster of the tsunami on his canvas too. 
        
        
        
        
  
  Nostalgia on Canvas
        Md. Takir Hossain
        
        The Daily Independent 
        Dhaka , 15 August 2005 
      “1984   is a remarkable year in my life.” Babul Mahmood, a promising and   passionate artist told the weekend independent, “This was when Artist   Monirul Islam inspired me to get admission in the Institute of Fine Arts   . This has been my dream since my childhood- the time I lost my mother.   I cannot remember her face. Deprived of learning the alphabet and   living an uncared childhood, drawing became my sole passion''. He added   with a smile, “Doors, window, the front and back yard, the floor and the   school state became my canvas!'' 
      But   now Babul is doing his best creations on canvas “This is a perfect   place where I can get shelter. Losing my mother, a painful incident in   my whole life, it was my father, who encouraged in me an art. However,   many relatives disapproved out of religious superstition''. 
      The   artist as a student used to go with his friends to Ramna Park ,   Kaligonj, Kamrangirchor and other places of natural beauty to paint. “At   noon we took buttered bun and tea, the cheapest lunch possible. My   friends and I were going through a money crisis. Sometime we sold   paintings, which gave us enjoyment – and we were retrieved from the   money crisis. One day, a foreigner bought one of my realistic work. I   shall never forget that sweet moment in my life. That painting was very   affluent and one of my favorites, but there was nothing to be done   except sell it''. 
      Babul   Mahmood delves deep in the memories of childhood. Like many other   artists his imagination is also fuelled by the pleasant events of past   days. Flying kites and spinning tops crowd Babul's works. His mood of   expressions is not realistic – but mostly semi-abstract, where kits and   tops are presented in various ways. 
      Babul   says, “I am a son of this reason. I always give priority to my region's   culture and heritage. Spinning top and flying kites are both part of   our childhood culture. 
      Vital   colors are another characteristic of Babul's imagination world. We can   fiend a lot of colors on his canvas to represent his colorful childhood   days. The artist is now having an exhibition at Calcutta – a great   window of opportunity for representing our artistic work in the other   world.
      
      
        
        
        
        
        Babul's buoyant world of whirling images
    Bangladesh News 
      
        
        
        Babul Mahmood's buoyant acrylic, watercolour and mixed media works are   on display at an exhibition at the Russian Science and Culture Centre.   He has continued with his acrylic work, and gone on to do watercolour,   and more mixed media to express his unique emotions and experiences.   Apart from earning a living as an art expert with a local firm, Babul   works by night to best express himself. 
      In   his mixed media work on Iraq and the Language Movement, Babul says, “An   artist in Bangladesh, like myself, cannot take up arms against any   powerful country waging a war. I can, however, show my protest.   Similarly, I've idealised the martyred hundreds in 1952. In the   watercolours, I've delineated my recent adventures and experiences at St   Martin's Island, in the south of Bangladesh. This includes underwater   diving during the full moon.” 
      Babul   has continued with his theme of nostalgia for his childhood days in his   acrylics as he feels that childhood in his time, 30 years ago, was   quite different from that of the present day Dhaka child — cooped up in   the urban existence of claustrophobic flats. “Even the parks and   playgrounds of the schools, where children play, are limited in number   and space or are non-existent. We've enjoyed large expanses of the   countryside during my holidays. Today children do have vacations, but   often that time off from school is crammed into TV viewing or book   reading,” he says. That is why he has repeated the images of the   whirling tops and the flying, gliding kites, and the spools of threads.   In search of a dramatic impact, he has gone in for contrasting loud   colours. 
      Babul   makes sketches of his works, and plans them out as he goes about his   routine daytime profession. As the sun sets he begins painting. This is   not just for the extra buck. He invests the earning from his exhibitions   to buy more art equipment. “Urban existence in Dhaka is such that it is   difficult to survive without an added income,” Babul comments. 
      In   the mixed media work are metal nails, wire netting, small cloth- and   -wool dolls, and tiny wooden houses. These lend a new angle to Babul's   works since his last flamboyant one at the Indian Cultural Centre. The   swimming fish, coral, sand and sea representations in his St. Martin's   Island portrayal capture the snoozing underwater world — which local   artists and photographers have diligently and cleverly covered over the   last five years. 
      Babul   did his Bachelors in Fine Arts from the Institute of Fine Arts, before   proceeding to the Banaras University, through an Indian cultural   exchange scholarship. Here he had some of the crème de la crème Indian   art teachers. He began exhibiting his works in Banaras, as a student. He   has, so far, taken part in more than 25 exhibitions at home and abroad —   including the displays at Kolkata, at the national competitions of the   Shilpakala Academy, and those organised by the Institute of Fine Arts,   DU (1985-1995). 
    
        
        
        
 
      
        Babul Mahmud's painting show
        Cultural Correspondend
      The Daily New Age
        April 24, 2005
      The   fourth solo painting exhibition of promising young artist Babul Mahmud   will begin at the Russian Cultural Centre in Dhaka at 6:00pm on April   24. The show will remain open from 4:00pm to 7.30pm everyday and will   continue till April 30, 2005. 
        
        Poet Nirmalendu goon will inaugurate the show as chief guest. Among   others, Yuri I Makarov, Director of the Russian Centre of Science &   Cultural, Dhaka and renowned art critic Moinuddin Khaled will be present   as guests. Babul Mahmud has been educated in Fine Arts in Dhaka   University and Banaras Hindu University, India. 
        
        
        
  
      
      Flying kite and spinning top
        
        The Daily Independent 
        By Takir Hossain
        Dhaka , 28 March 2003 
      Of   human life, divided into several stages, a foremost part is childhood.   ‘‘The child is the father of the man''. Observed and English romantic   poet and often it has been – but not always – that childhood foreshadows   our future. Babul Mahmood, a visionary artist also a photographer,   imagines life from a toddler's viewpoint. Naturally he is depressed by   his existing life. The bulkier part of the world is now war, butchery,   famine and lots of devastation. Babul Mahmood feels hopeless and   bamboozled. 
      Babul   represents life in his present exhibition in the form of three series   of work – while ‘‘fling kite'' and ‘‘spinning top'' are related to   childhood, ‘‘human life'' is connected with the good and bad side of   human nature. ‘‘Flying kite'' is a lively series of work. Babul says,   ‘‘I lost my mother in my childhood. Deprived of learning the alphabet,   drawing and flying kites were my only passion. My drawing then were full   of images of different type of kites. I even draw on the floor.'' 
      We   can find now lots of color on his canvas representing his colorful   childhood. ‘‘spinning top'' is another series work involving a boy's   favorite past time. Babul said, ‘‘I thing I was a vigorous as a spinning   top in my boyhood. But day by day, I have lost that unbounded sprit.   When I recall those days, I gain the energy to work on canvas.'' 
      Babul's   ‘‘Human being'' depicts our life. We are of duality – good and bad   abiding side by side. Though the bad works gradually to destroy a human   life, good works ensure our well-being and that of family and society.   Fairness, trust, impartiality, tolerance of malice bring elegance in our   humanity. 
       
        
        
        
  
      
      Canvas of childhood memories 
      The Daily Telegraphs
        Kolkata, India
        Wednesday, September 03, 2003
I   have had playmates, I have had companions,/ In my days of childhood, in   my joyful school-days — All, all are gone, the old familiar faces — Charles Lamb 
      “Childhood   shows the man as morning shows the day” goes the saying. It is indeed   the golden period of a man's life. The very fountain of energy and   innocence, “a stranger yet to pain” children's world is sunshine,   laughter and fun. It is the very foundation stone on which memories   build up over the years. These memories form the elixir of life that   keeps one going later on. Many childhood memories remain embedded in the   subconscious and are reflected or manifested in various ways in our   adulthood. Babul Mahmood is a talented artist who often reaches in to   his subconscious mind, digs out precious memories and blends them with   his mature intellect to create memorable canvases. Two of his favourite   sports, flying kites and spinning tops recur in his paintings like leit motif .   They occupy canvas space not just as objects but also symbolise   aspiration and hope, movement and speed. Vibrantly colourful kites   flying in the infinite sky, attempting to cross the boundary of space   reflect his desire to explore the unknown. His mature strokes and deft   handling are evident in his executions. 
     
     
        
        
        
  
     
      
      Fun and frolic gathered from the past 
      Babul Mahmood's exhibition at Zainul Gallery
        Fayza Haq
        
        The Daily Star
        Dhaka, Friday, April 11, 2003 
      As   an escape from the war news and turmoil of his adult years, Babul   Mahmood turns to the innocent games of his childhood days and glorifies   them in acrylic on canvas. Like many other artist Babul turns away from   the reality that surrounds him to find solace and peace in his past   where innocent games of kites and tops filled his days. With the   disturbing news of war of the present times one cannot blame him for   resorting to the past. These paintings are not totally realistic and   with lines, dots, swirls and splashes the artist conveys his feelings on   a magnificent scale. Babul loves motifs and he has filled his canvas   with startling colours and lines that pulsate with life. 
      In   his recent exhibition, "My dream, my childhood", at Zainul Gallery, the   painting "Childhood-3", acrylic on canvas, brought sections of two   massive tops whizzing on a background of beige, white, salmon pink and   gray blue. In the backdrop were impressions of more tops, with outlines   of dark red and gray-blue. Sparks appeared to be coming off the tops in   the forms of speckles of red, indigo and white. On top was a bar of   indigo with suggestions of more gyrating images in splashes of vermilion   and yellow ochre touched with white and black. In the foreground were a   riot of colours with red, yellow and indigo dominating the others. 
      Swirling   tops with their bottoms of sharp nails were seen in action in   "Childhood-2". The subjects were in gray green, touched with beige,   white and indigo. They too appeared to send off sparks as they appeared   to move in the backdrop of splashes of white, beige and gray. Outlines   of little tops and kites were in the pale background. The objects are   framed by broad indigo bars at the top and bottom. Numerous kites in   different sizes and colours were found at the top while in the bottom   were abstract shapes that spoke of joy and excitement and had been done   in yellow, ochre, red and shades of blue. There were connected to each   other with delicate white and gray lines. 
      A   single large top was brought in "Childhood-1" which had been done with   swirls of indigo, gray, beige and red. Two smaller tops were brought in   the background of white and beige mixed with blue. Two simplified shapes   of children were outline at the two sides, one leaning over and the   other bending down. Both at the top and bottom bars were brilliant   colours of orange, russet, red, blending and mixing with white and   black. 
      More   images of contentment and joy of the days gone by were seen in   "Childhood 20". This had blue, red and beige kits flying high on a pale   sky with their trailing wriggling threads. Below were the wheels of   ropes seen in red, white, black and indigo, with bold swirls at the   bottom. Twisting tops at the bottom and flying kites at the top with and   expanse of the beige white sky in between were found in "Childhood-21".   Here too the colours ranged from indigo and red to beige and black with   touches of dark sweeps at the top and bottom to frame the subjects. 
      Bold   splashes of orange, red and indigo form the background for the two tops   in "Childhood-14". Here the backdrop appeared more worked on than the   main subjects in red and indigo in front. Once again the action of the   toys had been captured subtlety. Two tiny whizzing tops had been   included at the back. More red, indigo and black kites swirled and   glided in the pale golden sky in "Childhood-8" while the black and gray   reels of threads for the kites had been placed dramatically in the left   forefront. Squiggles of yellow, red, blue and green covered the rest of   the space in front and added gaiety to the mood of the painting.Four   black and red tops appeared to meet in mid sky and give off red and blue   sparks in "Childhood 24" while the bottom half of the canvas had been   covered with a riot of zigzag lines in yellow, umber, blue, green, white   and black. Similarly in "Childhood-25" one saw silhouettes of tops   flying apart after meeting together on a white background. Below heaping   of colours with simple strokes in red, blue, yellow and gray provided   the contrast. 
      Babul   Mahmood, who got his MFA in Creative Painting in 1995 has had two   awards, one being from India and the other from Bangladesh. He has held   two solo painting exhibitions and over twenty group shows in India and   Bangladesh. He has training in film making, digital video production and   photography.
      
      
        
        
        
  
      
      
       Canvas of Joyful Memory
        Prasanta Daw, art critic
        Kolkata, India 
      Most   children involve in multifarious activities during their childhood   days. Memories of some such activities remain embedded in their   subconscious minds even as they grow up. For most creative minds those   nostalgic feelings find form through their creative expressions. One   such instance is painter BABUL MAHMOOD whose childhood memories blended   with his mature intellect are reflected through his canvases. Depiction   of flying kites with reels and spinning tops in his paintings are   symbols reminiscent of his childhood memories. Kite flying and spinning   tops are the part of our age, old custom and also a unique form of   recreation and fun. They also bear a different meaning in the context of   Babul's paintings. They signify aspiration and hope, movement and   speed, which are a part of every human life cycle. Vibrantly colorful   kites flying in the infinite sky attempting to cross the boundary of   space reflects the desire to explore the unexplored. 
      The   artist's aforesaid feelings, passions transcend in his canvas with a   melodious tune of warm bright colors. Skillful application of light and   shades are also evident in his executions. Restless curves, round,   square forms represent speedy movements and boundless ambitions of   mankind. This eternal theme has been interpreted in a creative language   with a deep aesthetic sensibility. 
      
      
        
        
        
  
      
      
      Babul's Canvas salutes the female role in 71
      By Md. Takir Hossain 
      The Daily Independent 
        Dhaka , 12 December 2003
      ‘Victory   in 1971 did not come through the efforts of the man alone. Women also   played a part. They hid members of the Mukti Bahini, supplied arms and   above all became victims of physical torture of the invading force.   Every year when we remember the glory of the freedom fighters, we forget   the role that the fairer sex played in 1971. Babul Mahmood devotes his   works to these women, who participated in the war and after it remained   in silent pain'. 
      1971   is a remarkable year for all of us. Our identity, personality and our   existence all are rooted to that year. As this week weakened Independent   is devoting the cover story to victory day, we have focused on 1971   related artworks. 
      Babul   Mahmood is a promising and prominent young artist in our art arena who   has been working from last decade on ‘1971' and its perspectives. His   Birrangana (Victim women) and Ekushey Shorone (In commemoration of 21 st   February) are two series of works where we find two memorable events   that influence our identity as a nation. 
      ‘‘Birrangana'' (Victim women), is a series of works done in oil. It is profoundly connected to our freedom struggle of 1971. 
      Like   men, many women also played a part in securing our independence and   some of them sacrificed their womanhood to give us our liberty and this   exhibition pays respect to them. Unfortunately, most of these women are   now neglected and are ignored by society. 
      These   women, despite their sacrifice have largely reminded hidden from   history. It is only recently that they have started revealing their own   experience of resistance and active participation in the war. This   involves, how they concealed or carried arms and messages to the front   and aided the Mukti Bahini. Memories of torture, pain of losing their   chastity, rape and violence have left a deep mark on their psyche and   have destroyed their lives. For so many victims, the silence of pain has   continued long after the war is never highlighted and the new   generation has very little idea of what they did. ‘‘So, in my works I   have tried to respect these victim women and their assistance that have   never been properly acknowledged. When I finished this series it proved   popular, I felt a humble but burning pride. In future I will do more   works on this subject.'' Remarked Babul Mahmood. 
      Ekushey   Shorone (In commemoration of 21 st February) is a series of   watercolors. Language movement was a significant part for assembling   common people for the establishment of bangle as a language. Babul has   great respect for our language movement and comments, ‘‘Now-a-days no   body shows interest in there works that deal with aspects of liberation   and freedom. It is a pity that we have already started forgetting our   glorious past that consists our origin and identity. Liberation has not   come in a single day. Language movement was the first step for the   attainment of our independence. Bangladesh is the only country in the   world where men sacrificed their lives for establishing the mother   language. So, 21 st February is also a distinguished date for us.'' 
      Babul   Mahmood had three solo art exhibitions such at the Zainul Gallery,   Indian Cultural Centre and Academy of Fine Arts , Kolkata , India and   took part in numerous local group exhibitions from 1986 to 2003.
      
      
        
        
        
  
      
      Babul's fantastic world
      Cultural Reporter 
      The Bangladesh Today 
        Dhaka , 28 March 2003 
      Babul   Mahmood is a visionary artist. He is very much depressed for his   present life that surrounds him - the world is now a bulky part of war,   famine, butchery, jealousy and devastations. Naturally, all these make   him frustrated. The present display, which is full of childhood   memorabilia, perhaps, reflects the emotion. 
      Babul   presents his present exhibition in three series of work-‘‘flying kite''   and ‘‘spinning top'' are related to childhood memories and ‘‘human   life'' is linked with good and bad side of human being. 
      ‘‘Flying   kite'' is an affluent series of work, where we can see colorful kites,   spool/reel and diverse color of fiber. This is a local and traditional   game in Bangladesh . ‘‘Spinning top'' is another series that portrays   Babul's another childhood game-various tops are spinning on his canvas   which is quite lively. Broken top is another remarkable part in his   spinning top series. Some tome can be broken being hit by another which   is shocking – black taint has been used for broken top which reflects   his inner world. Babul's ‘‘Human being'' impersonates our life. We are a   man of duel combination – good site and bad site. We can see that he   has used white cloth on the canvas, symbolized good and bad traits that   constitute a man's life. 
      We   can find a lot of color on his canvas-black, white, yellow, crimson,   azure and other miscellaneous colors have been used on a large scale for   representing his colorful children's days. Babul is now dweller of a   modern city for his survival but his inner self always quests for   childhood days. 
      Babul   who is also a photographer, took part in many group exhibitions and got   many awards. This is his 2 nd solo painting exhibition, which is being   held at Zainul Art Gallery . 
      
        
        
        
  
      
      Babul's jovial world
      By Md. Takir Hossain 
      The Daily Independent 
        Dhaka , 13 September 2002
      
      Babul   Mahmood says, ‘‘I lost my mother in my child hood. Deprived of learning   the alphabet, drawing became my sole passion. When my age was eight or   nine, I started drawing on the floor. My parents and relative would   stare with astonishment at my works and always encouraged me. After   completing my SSC, I participated in different type of competitions and   gained a lot of awards.'' 
      In   his work we can see the natural beauty of our country and the   exquisiteness of our folk culture, which get due priority. Adulation,   contentment, heartache, enthusiasm, recrimination these feelings and   struggle in life characterize his works. Scarecrow we see the familiar   figure in all its bucolic charm. The scarecrow is observed at the hub of   activity adjacent to the cornfield scaring away birds so that they   cannot wreck the corn. A small cottege is also noticeable where lives a   peasant's boy who watches over the scarecrow. 
      In   another works we can see some local trees, board bushes and some human   figures. A woman is carrying something on her head. She was worn a   ragged sari, a symbol of our working woman in the countryside. Two males   and females are chatting and swapping gossip. Hushed ambience along   with clarity of nature is also added in his work.      In another works we can see some woman are bathing, a common sight   in our rural life. They expend their horizon of knowledge by exchanging   each other's ideas. In color of pure and splendid emerald green, pale   yellow, crimson, black, azure and white the canvas gradually draws us in   to a world were tree and bush are expressed by emerald green, the sky   indicated by indigo. Dry leaves are pale yellow, black blurs and screen   bitter scenes with a welcome haziness. 
      In   Babul's ‘‘Birrangana'' (victim woman), correlated to our freedom   struggle in 1971 as the most significant landmark in the history of   Bangladesh, depicts that victims of the tyrannical Pakistanis of that   time, even if woman, are part and parcel of our glorious history. They   are now neglected and lost member of our society. 
      Babul   notes, ‘‘Rape was the ultimate price woman paid in the war of   liberation. They became oaths for the army and the collaborators. Victim   woman have largely remained hidden from this history. It is only   recently that they have started revealing their own experience of   resistance and active participation in the war, how they concealed or   carried arms and messages to the front. Memories of torture, rape and   violence have left a deep scar on their psyche and destroyed individual   lives. For so many victims, they silence of pain has persisted long   after the war was over. When I finished this series and it proved   popular, I left a humbling, burning pride. In future I will do more   works on this subject.'' 
      In   another sumptuous work ‘‘humanism'', done in kashi, a holy place for   followers of Hinduism but where followers of other religions gather,   highlights amity and admiration that is created here. Babul's, who has   participated in over 20 group exhibitions at Dhaka and different places   on India , is also a photographer who has own wards from the Bangladesh   photographic society.