"To prevent myself from producing the same kind of work, I keep altering my 
vision. From the day people begun to see me as a painter, a huge 
responsibility fell upon me, particularly to respond to the feelings of the 
people at the grassroots level who are also my viewer, as also to delve deep 
into realties of life around me."
One of India's important post-modernist painters, Sunil Das rose to 
prominence with his drawing of horses. "I must have done 7000 horses between 
1950 to 60," he says. "In 1962, I went to Spain, where I was fascinated by 
the bull fights."
About 60 years of age, he can look back at his nine to ten phases of 
paintings, all of them marked by supreme skill and a sense of integrity. An 
indefatigable painter, Das jumped from one style to another easily.
Talking about his art style, he says, "To express my authentic feelings 
about reality, I have to interpret it, I have conceptualise it. The previous 
reality gets transformed in the laboratory of minds. Then, I bring it out on 
the canvas."
Das came from a middle class family and his father was just a small 
businessman. After completing school, he decided to become a painter and 
joined a local art school. "I am a good sports man," he says. "I like things 
which have a lot of rhythm and energy."
He doesn't ever use photographs or models for his painting. "I do a sketch 
before I start painting. I always struggle with colours and shapes, until 
they fall to desired pattern. Like a music conductor, I summon all my music 
instruments to play and orchestrate an aesthetic unit out of various 
experiences." He does not confine himself to using brush or pen while 
painting, and often paints with the palms of his hands or with his fingers.
A French art scholarship with the Ecole Nationale Superieure des Beaux-Arts 
took him to Europe. It was in the course of his travels that he chanced to 
spend a few months in Spain, where he developed his passion for horses and 
bulls. Das' paintings have also been influenced by his study of sculpture at 
Santiniketan, Kolkata, and his study of graphic art in Paris. His paintings 
have a kind of structure and rigidity that one would typically find in 
sculpture and in the etchings of graphic art.
Das's paintings not only express the physical attributes of his subjects but 
also their associative ones. Every once in a while he paints human beings, 
but his depiction of the human anatomy is skewed, to a point that it almost 
borders on macabre surrealism. For example, his series on women with 
mysterious, tantalising eyes - all oil on canvas, the portraits convey, in 
various forms including the erotic, the pressures women are subject to.
Hardly ever painting in loud or warm colors, Das uses soft brown, mauve and 
white in the background to bring out the drama of life. He blends talent 
with hard work. He works by suggestion and minimalism. Quite absurd in form, 
his paintings are morbidly fascinating. "I delve a lot on man's inhumanity 
to man," he says.
Das has the distinction of being the only Indian artist to have won a 
National Award (the Shiromani Kala Puraskar) while still an undergraduate at 
the Government College of Art and Craft, kolkata. Besides having been 
featured in several exhibitions, his works are also a part of the 
collections of renowned museums such as the National Gallery of Modern Art, 
New Delhi, the Glenbarra Art Museum, Japan, and the Ludwig Museum, Germany.