Though widely recognized as the father of India’s nuclear program, Dr. Homi Jehangir Bhabha (1909–1966) was also an accomplished painter and patron of the arts. Trained as a physicist at Cambridge, Bhabha had a deep and lifelong engagement with the visual arts. He was known to sketch and paint in his leisure, blending scientific precision with a keen sense of form and aesthetics.
Influenced by classical European art and Indian traditions alike, Bhabha’s artworks often featured abstract compositions, figures, and expressive brushwork. As the founding director of the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR), Bhabha personally oversaw its architectural and artistic design. He commissioned prominent Indian modernists like M.F. Husain, V.S. Gaitonde, and B. Prabha to create works for TIFR, making it a hub of both scientific and artistic innovation. His own paintings and drawings are preserved in select archives and collections, highlighting a lesser-known but significant facet of his legacy.
In essence, Homi Bhabha embodied the renaissance spirit—seamlessly merging science, art, and culture to shape modern India.