Prodyot Coomar Tagore

Maharaja Bahadur Sir Prodyot Kumar Tagore KCIE (September 17, 1873 – August 28, 1942) was a leading land owner, philanthropist, art collector, and photographer in Kolkata, India. He belonged to the Pathuriaghata branch of the Tagore family.

Sir Prodyot Coomar Tagore by G.P. Jacomb-Hood, 1927
Sir Prodyot Coomar Tagore by G.P. Jacomb-Hood, 1927

Prodyot Kumar was the eldest son and heir of Sir Jatindramohan Tagore (1831–1908), who had been honoured with the hereditary title of Maharaja Bahadur in 1891. Like Jatindramohun himself, Prodyot Kumar was adopted. His biological father was Sourindra Mohan Tagore (1840–1915), who was Jatindramohun’s brother.[1] Sourindra Mohan was a distinguished musician and musical scholar. Like his natural and adoptive fathers, Prodyot was a man of “learning, taste and enlightenment.” .[2]

Art and photography

Gopi Mohan Tagore, Prodyot Coomar's great grandfather, had begun the Tagore family's art collection with the assistance of the British artist George Chinnery, who had visited Calcutta in 1803.[3] Prodyot Coomar greatly expanded the collection, and at his death it was the largest collection of European art in India. Works by Van Dyck, Rubens, Constable, Veronese and Murillo as well as British painters who were active in Calcutta in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, such as Jacomb-Hood, Chinnery and Thomas Daniell, covered the walls of the Tagore palaces. In later life, Prodyot Coomar donated extensive collections of Company Paintings to the fledgling collection of the Victoria Memorial Hall in Kolkata. When the Tagore collection was finally dispersed in the 1950s, a number of pictures and drawings were acquired by the institution for its permanent collection.[4]

In addition to being a collector Prodyot Coomar was an active patron and artist himself. He was a keen photographer, and in 1898 was the first Indian to be elected a fellow of the British Royal Photographic Society.[5] He maintained a studio in his Tagore Castle residence, and exhibited in Kolkata. He was the founder and first President of the Academy of Fine Arts, Calcutta, a trustee and Chairman of the Indian Museum and a fellow of the Royal Asiatic Society.

Public life

The Maharaja was active in public life. He was a Commissioner of the Corporation of Calcutta, a Governor of the Mayo Hospital, and a member of the Bengal Legislative Council.[6] From 1899 to 1911, he was the Secretary of the British Indian Association, an organization of wealthy landowners which represented their own and Indian interests in general to the British administration.[7]

Prodyot Coomar Tagore represented the city of Calcutta at the coronation of Edward VII in 1902, one of fifteen “Indian Representatives of British Indian Provinces” to be present at the coronation in Westminster Abbey.[8] When George V visited India in 1905, Tagore was the Secretary of the Imperial Reception Committee. During the King’s stop in Kolkata, he gave a "lavish and extensive entertainment" on the maidan for him.[9] He was knighted in May 1906 by the Prince of Wales (later George V), and was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire (KCIE) in the 1936 Birthday Honours.

The Tagores built a number of extravagant palaces in Kolkata and elsewhere. Prodyot Coomar Tagore divided his time between Tagore Castle, a fanciful imitation of European castles; The Prasad nearby, now used by the United Nations; and Emerald Bower, a country estate now part of Rabindra Bharati University.

Prodyot Kumar Tagore died on August 28, 1942 in Varanasi.

References

  1. A. Claude Campbell, Glimpses of Bengal: A Comprehensive, Archaeological. Biographical and Pictorial History of Bengal, Behar and Orissa, Calcutta, (1907) Sunddep Prakashan, New Delhi, 2003, vol. 2, page 180.
  2. Chitra Deb, The “Great Houses” of Old Calcutta, in Sukanta Chaudhuri, editor, Calcutta: The Living City, Volume I, The Past, Oxford University Press, Calcutta 1990 page 63.
  3. Prodyot Coomar Tagore, Catalogue of the Pictures and Sculptures in the Collection of the Maharajah Tagore, Thacker, Spink Calcutta, 1905, i.
  4. Philippa Vaughan, editor, The Victoria Memorial Hall, Calcutta, Marg Publications Mumbai 1997 pages 62, 63.
  5. Nikhil Sarker, Painting and the Spirit of Calcutta, in Sukanta Chaudhuri, editor, Calcutta: The Living City, Volume I, The Past, Oxford University Press, Calcutta 1990 page 131.
  6. Who Was Who, 1941-1950, A & C Black, London 1981.
  7. Sandip Tagore, Peopled Azimuth: Reminiscences and Reflections of an Indian in Japan, New Delhi, 1987, page 20.
  8. A. Claude Campbell, Glimpses of Bengal: A Comprehensive, Archaeological. Biographical and Pictorial History of Bengal, Behar and Orissa, Calcutta, (1907) Sunddep Prakashan, New Delhi, 2003, vol. 2, p. 180.
  9. Id.
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