Explained: The making of the grand Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose statue to be unveiled at India Gate today

Explained: The making of the grand Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose statue to be unveiled at India Gate today

Sep 8, 2022 - 13:30
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Explained: The making of the grand Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose statue to be unveiled at India Gate today

It’s a big day for New Delhi. Prime Minister Narendra Modi will inaugurate the newly christened Kartavya Path, a stretch from Rashtrapati Bhavan to India Gate that is revamped with red granite, walkways, refurbished canals, added green spaces, and more.

According to the government, it symbolises a shift from erstwhile Rajpath being an icon of power to Kartavya Path being an example of public ownership and empowerment As part of the grand makeover, the statue of freedom fighter Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose under the canopy at India Gate will be unveiled today.

The statue is part of the Centre’s Rs 13,450-crore Central Vista Project, which will have a new Parliament building, new office and residences for the prime minister and vice-president and new ministry buildings. The North and South Blocks, the secretariat buildings flanking Rashtrapati Bhavan, will be converted into museums.

Also read: Rajpath to make way for Kartavya Path: How India is stepping away from its colonial past

Netaji hologram makes way for the statue

In January, Modi announced that the Netaji statue would come up under the India Gate canopy. Built in 1936, the canopy earlier housed the statue of King George V.

On 23 January to mark the 125th birth anniversary of the freedom fighter, the PM unveiled a hologram with the same dimensions as the original, which was placed on the same spot. In late July, the hologram was switched off as work to fit the statue started, according to a report in The Indian Express.

The 28-feet black granite statue has been carved from a monolithic block of granite weighing 280 metric tonne. The block of jet black granite picked for the statue was transported to Delhi from Telangana and the statue was carved out of it over two months.

The National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA) under the Ministry of Culture, prepared the design for the statue. According to NGMA Director-General Adwaita Gadanayak, the black granite picked for the statue was meant to be reflective of Bose’s “very strong character”.

A 100-feet-long truck with 140 wheels was specially designed for this giant granite stone to travel 1,665 km from Khammam in Telangana to New Delhi, the culture ministry said.

The man behind the statue

The statue is “hand-sculpted using traditional techniques and modern tools”, the Ministry of Culture said. A team of 20 to 25 sculptors led by renowned artist Arun Yogiraj have worked on the statue.

Yogiraj comes from a family of Mysuru palace artists and is the son of noted sculptor Yogiraj Shilpi. An MBA, he worked with a private firm for a few years before taking up sculpting full time in 2008.

The 39-year-old from Mysuru is best known for the 12-feet statue of Vedic scholar Adi Shankaracharya at Kedarnath. He was roped in by the government and worked closely with a team from the NGMA.

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