Hungarian born, Indian soul

11 June,2011 09:03 AM IST |   |  The Guide Team

Artists, spiritualists and seekers, Hungarians Elizabeth Sass Brunner and her daughter Elizabeth Brunner found 'home' in India. While this invaluable memoir by Dr Imre Lazar pays tribute to the younger Brunner, it also captures the duo's journeys across the Indian landscape and their intimate connect on canvas with India's thinkers from Tagore and Gandhi to Nehru


Artists, spiritualists and seekers, Hungarians Elizabeth Sass Brunner and her daughter Elizabeth Brunner found 'home' in India. While this invaluable memoir by Dr Imre Lazar pays tribute to the younger Brunner, it also captures the duo's journeys across the Indian landscape and their intimate connect on canvas with India's thinkers from Tagore and Gandhi to Nehru

It started with a dream on Elizabeth Brunner's 19th birthday. On July 1, 1929, she dreamt of being in a cellar in Nagykanizska, where an old man with a white beard appeared holding a candle in his hands. He gave her the candle and told heru00a0-- "Take this light to every nook and corner of the world."


Elizabeth Brunner, Bombay, 1932; Photograph by M. Desai. Mother and
daughter arrived in the city on February 17 1930. As they were dressed
in hand-woven clothes the British authorities mistakenly thought they
were followers of Mahatma Gandhi and almost sent them back.


When she narrated this vivid dream to her mother, she exclaimed that the bearded man was Rabindranath Tagore. Taking this as a sign to travel to India, mother and daughter set out to Santiniketan, after writing to Tagore. Here, both artists' flourished. They found peace and lived the life of most Indians in the decades to come. The mother-daughter duo went on to paint canvases across the length and breadth of India, every stroke dabbed with a brush of divinity.

"Exciting news! Mid-day is now on WhatsApp Channels Subscribe today by clicking the link and stay updated with the latest news!" Click here!
Hungarian artist Elizabeth Sass Brunner Dr Imre Lazar memoir