Pratapaditya Pal is an Indian scholar ofSoutheast Asian andHimalayan art and culture, specializing particularly in the history of art of India,Nepal andTibet. He has served as acurator of South Asian art at several prominent US museums including Boston'sMuseum of Fine Arts, theLos Angeles County Museum of Art, and theArt Institute of Chicago, where he has organized more than 22 major exhibitions and helped build the museums' collection . He has also written over 60 books and catalogs, and over 250 articles on the subject, taught at several universities, and served as the editor of the Indian art magazine,Marg.[1] In 2009 he was awardedPadma Shri by the Government of India for his contributions to the study of Indian art.[2]
Pal was born inBengal,British India and received his early schooling inShillong,Darjeeling andCalcutta.[3] Studying at theUniversity of Calcutta, he hoped to specialize inanthropology, but the university didn't offer any courses in the area in 1957, and he instead obtained aMaster of Arts degree in ancient Indian history and culture.[1] He continued at the university to earn aPhD in the history ofNepali architecture in 1962. He then won a scholarship toCambridge University, where in 1965 he earned a second PhD in Nepali sculpture and painting. However he failed to get a teaching job in India, and moved to the US instead.[1]
In 1967 Pal was appointed the curator of the Indian art collection atBoston Museum, a position that had previously been held byAnanda Coomaraswamy. In 1969, he moved to theLos Angeles County Museum of Art, which was then beginning to develop its own collection of Indian art. Pal joined as the head of department of Indian and Islamic art, and subsequently served as the museum's acting director (1979–80) and as the senior curator of Indian and Southeast Asian art from 1981.Los Angeles Times art writerSuzanne Muchnic described his legacy as building the museum's collection from "a handful of items to about 4,000 pieces, giving LACMA one of the nation's preeminent holdings of Indian and Southeast Asian art."[1][4]
In 1995, Pal was appointed visiting curator of Indian, Himalayan and Southeast Asian Art atThe Art Institute of Chicago. He moved toNorton Simon Museum,Pasadena, California in 2003.[5] During the mid-1970s Pal had advisedNorton Simon on acquiring Asian art for that museum.[1]
Books and catalogs