P.N. MAGO

Reminiscences

Arpana Caur

Artist

When I remember Mago Sahib, I think of all the lost old-world gentleness and the ability to wear learning so lightly. That generation is gone with the winds of Time. “Pavne mein Pavan Samaaya, Jyoti Jot Ral Jaaye, Maati Maati Hui Ek…..” (Air is absorbed in Air, Fire in Fire, Earth in Earth). His friends, Sanyal Sahib, Amar Nath Sehgal, Satish Gujral, Gurcharan Singhji the potter, Parasherji, all gone into the great void, all with the flavour of a lost homeland (Pakistan) reflected in their nostalgic artworks, some of which are thankfully housed at the Partition Museum, Amritsar.

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Prof. Paramjeet Singh

Former Officiating Principal, College of Art, Delhi, Printmaker and Painter

I became acquainted with Mr Pran Nath Mago in 1967-68, when he was director of the Delhi Design Development Centre at Okhla. One of my classmates had joined the centre as a designer and I visited him to see the design development for various handicraft articles. There I was introduced to Mr Mago. We didn’t interact too much at the time. But in the same year that I was selected as lecturer at the College of Art, Delhi, Mr Mago joined as professor of painting.

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Ghazanfar Zaidi

Former Dean, Faculty of Fine Arts, Jamia Millia Islamia, Delhi

As I recall my cherished memories with Mr Mago, a mentor par excellence, I am reminded of the profound impact he had on my life and the lives of countless others. His wisdom, kindness and unwavering dedication continue to inspire us even in his physical absence.

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Dr Varsha Das

Writer

I would often meet Prof. Mago and his wife at the exhibitions of other artists. Both of them were always gentle and smiling. However, I was not fortunate enough to view and review any of his exhibitions in Delhi. I knew that he was a figurative painter and had heard about his painting ‘Moonlight Over Jantar Mantar’.

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Kanchan Chander

Artist

Prof. P.N. Mago taught me in the early years of the College of Art. He taught me composition and his ideas on Bauhaus not only influenced me but were reflected in my art. So much so that I became very fond of him, and so did he. We became very good friends and actually had a group—Prof. Mago, Prof. S.S. Vohra from the sculpture department, Jai Zharotia from the painting department. We would all sit together after a show, do adda baazi, in someone’s house. Their wives would cook such lovely meals and we would have endless discussions on art, on the show we had seen, on the future of art.

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Kavita Nayar

Artist

Mago Sir was a man with an outstanding personality, warm-hearted, gentle and very straightforward. In the early 1980s, soon after I had moved from Santiniketan to Delhi, he was the one who introduced me to the contemporary art scene in the Capital. He became like a father figure; my then two-year-old daughter used to think he was her Nanu (grandfather).

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Jagdish Chander

Artist

Prof. Mago was my teacher at the College of Art, Delhi, in 1973. He was an inspiring teacher, able to explain concepts simply and clearly, and very supportive. Once he retired from the College of Art, Prof. Jai Zharotia requested him to take classes in the department of painting for some time. It gave more students an opportunity to benefit from his experience. For he was not only knowledgeable, but willing to share that knowledge.

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Amba Sanyal

Daughter of B.C. Sanyal, Costume Designer for Theatre and Cinema

My childhood memories of Mr Pran Nath Mago and Mrs Prema Mago are of an always smiling couple, full of enthusiasm and warmth. There seemed to be no dearth of ideas to discuss and imaginary projects to work on. Some of them, I dare say, would be realised. For me, Mr Mago was my father B.C. Sanyal’s most dear and dependable associate in their work together as educators, painters, organisers and sharers of ideas, expressed through their writings. Later, I got to know him better as a student at the College of Art, Delhi, where he was a faculty member.

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Dr Vipan Chandra

Memories of a Beloved Uncle

Lucky human beings grow up with different kinds of bonds that add meaning and joy to their lives. The most obvious bonds are those between parents and children, siblings, cousins, friends, spouses, and in some cases teacher-disciple bonds. There is one bond, however, which is less often a subject of conversation outside families. It’s the bond between uncles and aunts on one side and nephews and nieces on the other.
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Punam Mathur

Mago's Daughter

Papa was a very loving father. He doted on us two sisters, indulged us and hardly ever said no to anything. He took us for many outings – to Rajghat, where we would roll down the grassy slopes, to the zoo, to the dolls museum, to Bal Bhawan, where we loved riding on a children’s train, or even just an ice cream or night picnics at India Gate. Every evening, he would have a drink, and I looked forward to having my drink with him – a Coke with ice!

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Chandrika Mago

Mago's Daughter

My strongest memories are of an open, welcoming home. My parents loved meeting people. They were hospitable, sensitive and caring, willing to go out of their way to help, with a strong sense of ethics and commitment to work. They never chased money; they spent little on themselves. Yet, I don’t remember wanting for anything.

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Taruni Mathur

Mago's grand-daughter

Nana was a force of nature. Quiet, but strong. He and Nani, and how they went through life together, defines grace. They were a team, and an amazing team at that, and I still can’t think of one without thinking of the other.

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