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Back to Modern and Contemporary British Art

Balraj Khanna, Out of the Blue (2), 1987 © Courtesy of the Estate of Balraj Khanna.

Balraj Khanna Theatre of the Natural World

10 rooms in Modern and Contemporary British Art

  • Fear and Freedom
  • Construction
  • Marcel Duchamp and Richard Hamilton
  • Franciszka Themerson
  • Balraj Khanna
  • No Such Thing as Society
  • End of a Century
  • Mona Hatoum: Current Disturbance
  • The State We're In
  • Zineb Sedira

In these poetic, abstract paintings Balraj Khanna explores ideas of nature, community, imagination and the unconscious

Born in the Punjab region of India in 1939, Balraj Khanna was an artist, writer and curator. He moved to the UK in 1962 intending to further his studies in English literature, but instead discovered a passion for drawing and painting. Within months of his arrival in London, Khanna found a community of fellow artists, including the painters F.N. Souza (1924–2002) and Avinash Chandra (1931–1991). By 1964 he was a member of the Indian Painters Collective, a group that advocated for the representation of Indian artists in Britain.

In 1965, a lengthy period of recuperation from a road accident sparked a change in Khanna’s painting style. Recovering next to the Forêt St-Bernard in Metz, France, Khanna felt connected to nature for the first time since leaving India. He credited this time with instilling ‘a new force’ in his practice, inspiring his multi-layered abstract works. Incorporating organic and geometric forms, Khanna sought to express what he called ‘the theatre of the natural world’.

Khanna continued to experiment with new techniques and materials including string, sand and stencils to create vibrant surfaces that burst with life. His distinctive forms are ambiguous yet familiar. They suggest a range of images, from plants and animals to the toys and kites of his childhood.

Khanna had his first solo exhibition in 1965, and in the decades that followed he exhibited widely in the UK, France and United States. This display celebrates Tate’s recent acquisition of three major paintings and is presented in affectionate memory of the artist, who passed away in January 2024.

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Tate Britain
Main Floor
Room 24

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Until 21 April 2025

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Balraj Khanna, Discourse of the Wonderer  1967

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artworks in Balraj Khanna

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Balraj Khanna, Such a Long Journey  1967–1968

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artworks in Balraj Khanna

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Balraj Khanna, Garden  1987

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artworks in Balraj Khanna

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Balraj Khanna, Festival  1970

Stretching over three and a half metres in length, this painting is an expanse of leaping, tangled forms simultaneously exploding and contracting in space. Khanna is interested in using abstraction to explore related ideas of community and togetherness. Here, the painting’s title refers to the universal nature of festivals across all cultures and countries. This work, alongside Out of the Blue (2), was exhibited in the 1989 exhibition The Other Story: Afro-Asian Artists in Post-war Britain at the Hayward Gallery, London, where Khanna served on the exhibition committee.

Gallery label, August 2024

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artworks in Balraj Khanna

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Balraj Khanna Discourse of the Wonderer 1967

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Balraj Khanna Such a Long Journey 1967–1968

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Balraj Khanna Garden 1987

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Balraj Khanna Festival 1970
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