Amarnath Ghosh, a master’s of fine arts candidate in dance in the Performing Arts Department in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, was killed in the Academy/Sherman Park neighborhood of St. Louis on Tuesday, Feb. 27, 2024. He was 34. A homicide investigation by the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department is ongoing.

An accomplished dancer, vocalist and choreographer, Ghosh was originally from Suri, in the Indian state of West Bengal. He began learning Hindustani vocals at age 6, in nearby Kolkata, and later studied at India’s eminent Kalakshetra College of Fine Arts and Kuchipudi Art Academy, both in Chennai.
“Amarnath was an exquisite dancer,” said Elinor Harrison, a lecturer in dance and a faculty affiliate in philosophy-neuroscience-psychology in Arts & Sciences, who was helping Ghosh to prepare for a performance of his MFA final project. “His fullness of expression was unparalleled. He moved with every ounce of his being. I’ve never seen anything like it. He was magnificent. Everyone who saw him dance was enraptured.”
An exponent of four classical dance styles — Kuchipudi as well as Bharatnatyam, Manipuri and Kathak — Ghosh also received extensive training in the Najrul Geeti, Devotional, Bhajan and Baul vocal traditions. He felt a special kinship with Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941), India’s first Nobel laureate, and performed both Rabindra Sangeet, or songs written by Tagore, and Rabindra Nrita, a dance style based on the poet’s dance/drama compositions.
Ghosh performed extensively across India and, more recently, in the United States. His many honors include more than a dozen awards, from the Tinakaran Fine Arts Academy, the Nataraj Dance Academy and the National Classical Dance Academy, among others. Last year, his solo, “Marakata Manimaya,” was selected for the American College Dance Association’s National Festival in Long Beach, Calif.
In St. Louis, Ghosh performed with Asha Prem’s Dances of India and worked with both youth and adults at the Consuming Kinetics Dance Company.
“His generosity of spirit and love for dance inspired so many people in this city,” said Joanna Dee Das, an associate professor of dance, who worked with Ghosh in several seminars and an independent study. “Our discussions would delve deep into social theory, philosophy and spirituality, and eventually connect everything back to dance. He brought together mind, body and spirit.”
“Amarnath was not just a dance artist, but an artist in the whole sense,” said Deepangsu Chatterjee, a close friend and doctoral candidate at the McKelvey School of Engineering. “He was a musician. He was a mathematician. We would have long discussions about the connections between art and science.”

Chatterjee, a fellow Bengali as well as a violinist, met Ghosh through Diwali, the annual performing arts showcase organized by Umang, WashU’s Indian graduate student association. “He was a broad-minded person,” Chatterjee said. “Everybody knew how good he was. Everybody fell in love with him. He was immensely popular.”
McKelvey doctoral candidate Kritika Sharma remembers Ghosh as an integral member of Umang. “He had an encouraging spirit that no one could match,” Sharma said. Whether performing in Diwali, teaching Bharatnatyam workshops, or chatting in Bengali, Hindi, Malyalam, Kannada, Tamil or Telegu, “he radiated energy and spread joy and laughter.” He had a gift for transforming a short conversation into something “you will remember for the rest of your life.”
Ghosh’s MFA final project was a six-part dance film, nearly a year in the making, titled “Seasons: Colors of My Life: A Take on Tagore’s Compositions.” The piece, accompanied by an original poem from Chatterjee, will be screened March 22 and 23 in WashU’s Edison Theatre, 6465 Forsyth Blvd. The evening, which was planned long before Ghosh’s death and was to have been the culmination of his time at WashU, also will feature new works by his MFA classmates Caroline Bertho and Emily Ehling.
Ehling remembers Ghosh’s “generosity of spirit and his gratitude for everything. Not a day went by that he wasn’t thankful to be in class and excited to learn even the smallest things.
“Everything was beautiful for him,” Ehling added. “He used the word beautiful, I think, more than any other word. He said beautiful all the time.”
A visitation for Ghosh will be held from 4-6 p.m. Thursday, March 7, at Schrader Funeral Home, 14960 Manchester Road in Ballwin, Mo. For more information or to leave a remembrance, visit schrader.com.
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