ARTIANA – Highlights – Lot 25 – Modern & Contemporary South Asian Art – Online Auction – No Buyer’s Premium – 12-16 March 2020

Lalu Prasad Shaw is a self-trained artist who emerged as one of the leading figures among Indian graphic artists during the resurgence of printmaking in the late sixties. He made a name for himself both in India and abroad, winning acclaim, accolades and cementing himself as one of the best in the field. More than printmaking, he is also one of the few painters who led Bengal art in a new direction when Indian art was in dire need of a fresh beginning.

It was during the early 1970s when he joined Kala Bhavana as a faculty member that his art took to this new direction of painting after getting inspired by Company Period Lucknow temperas. This switch to an entirely new idiom and media was a stretch from the abstract graphics that he did for long; however, it did not clash with his pursuit of figuration. 

In the picture, the lady is standing with a gentle gesture while enjoying a quiet time of leisure. She exudes an air of elegance and refinement seen in her posture, accessories, and entire demeanor. The portrait is achieved with bright flat colors and tidy lines while confined within borders, an idiom fashioned from diverse sources of native pictorial tradition. As with his early temperas, there is an obvious reference to the Bengal School but evolved to bear the imprint of a modernist sensibility.

Text Reference: 
Manasij Majumder, Lalu Prasad Shaw: A Dual Discourse, The Fine Art Advisory, Dubai, unpaginated

Auction Catalogue – South Asian Art – ‘Modern and Contemporary’ – March 12 -16, 2020

ARTIANA – Highlights – Lot 4 – Modern & Contemporary South Asian Art – Online Auction – No Buyer’s Premium – 12-16 March 2020

In a career spanning over five decades, Anjolie Ela Menon’s work has a distinct amalgamation of western style with eastern subject influences. Her figures resemble early Christian iconography with a beautiful rendering of Indian themes. 

As a figurative painter, her paintings have very distinctive features influenced by Byzantine and Romanesque paintings and murals that she encountered in the early years of her career. Concurrently, the influence of everyday life is also evident in her works as seen in the current picture. Here, she depicted an image of a young Brahmin man, possibly a Namboodri Brahmin priest from her husband’s native land of Kerala. The holy man was identifiable through the thread around his chest along with the ritualistic mark on his forehead. 

She had frequently depicted them along with sadhus in her works from the 1990s onwards. A period of time when India was experiencing “religious turbulence over issues such as ‘the Mandir and the Masjid,’ she uses these “essentially Hindu devices to chant a compelling litany of both Ram and Rahim…”

Text Reference: 
Isana Murti, Anjolie Ela Menon, New Delhi, 1995, pg. 37

Auction Catalogue – South Asian Art – ‘Modern and Contemporary’ – March 12 -16, 2020

ARTIANA – Highlights – Lot 10 – Modern & Contemporary South Asian Art – Online Auction – No Buyer’s Premium – 12-16 March 2020

Sayed Haider Raza first painted the Bindu in the late 1970s as a single solid black dot that lay unmoving at the center of a field of colors. Through the years, however, this circle or bindu manifested itself in various forms in his works and took on several different meanings, as zero, drop, or seed. It became less of a graphical component and more as the focal point on which Raza structured his canvases. 

Here, the artist has turned to yet another interpretation of the bindu, executed in an almost abstinent palette of white and grays. Titled, Shanti – Bindu, the rings that radiate from the spherical white core of the painting transmits outward spreading tranquility and calmness. Once again, the bindu was transformed, from a pulsing black orb to a gentler quality, emitting an image of ethereal stillness and peace.  

Likening his monochromatic works to his spiritual journey, Raza posited: “I have found a divine quest in me to come to the essentials. Less is more. And I thought, that to express my aspirations to the divine, I would use fewer colors, to create a sacred feel.”

Auction Catalogue – South Asian Art – ‘Modern and Contemporary’ – March 12 -16, 2020

ARTIANA – Highlights – Lot 30 – Modern & Contemporary South Asian Art – Online Auction – No Buyer’s Premium – 12-16 March 2020

Lot 30 – M.F. Husain – ‘Perhaps these three horses are like three cheers for my Knighthood’ – 1989 – 40 x 60 in. (101.6 x 152.4 cm.) – acrylic on canvas

“My horses are classical because I see them as ageless and immortal. They draw chariots in the great epics, they stand proudly in the poorest stables, they are embodiments of strength like the dragon of China. I don’t show their hooves because there’s no need to. My eyes stop at the color, I don’t have to paint the details because the details are superfluous. Art is not in the painting, art is in the artist. He relives life through his painting.” – M.F. Husain

M.F. Husain encountered and portrayed the equine figure throughout his artistic career; this fascination later took him to various continents and cultures. He acknowledged the influence of terracotta horses from the Qin dynasty, the hundreds of galloping horse paintings he studied during his travels to China, along with the equine sculptures of the Italian sculptor Marino Marini (1901- 1980) in his works, among others. Yet he considers the tazias (effigies) of Imam Husayn’s faithful horse during Muharram processions of his boyhood as the core inspiration in his quest to represent the form. 

The muscular bodies of the horses are carefully interwoven in this composition, galloping and rampant beside one another, portraying energy and dynamism. Their necks are elegantly arched, their strong heads held high as if caught while braying. Their mouths, as seen here, resemble that of a dragon’s – masculine and feral – while their hinds are distinctly feminine, making them a perfect combination of strength and grace. Husain paid particular attention to the palette using blocks of vivid and sharp colors, reminiscent of the Basholi period and one of his favorite artistic devices, to accentuate movement in the picture and lend the entire composition depth and lyricism. Titled ‘Perhaps these three horses are like three cheers for my Knighthood’ and dated 1989, the current lot refers to the conferment of Husain’s third civilian honor from the Government of India – the Padma Vibhushan Award on the same year and which he referred to as his knighthood. He previously received the Padma Shri and the Padma Bhushan in 1955 and 1973, respectively.  

Making use of a wide range of cultural inspiration as wells as personal experiences, Husain bestowed his horses with a potent and evocative presence, representing his captivation and fascination with the equine figure throughout different stages of his career.

Auction Catalogue – South Asian Art – ‘Modern and Contemporary’ – March 12 -16, 2020

ARTIANA announces Online Auction of Modern and Contemporary South Asian Art – No Buyer’s Premium – 12-16 March 2020

Browse the auction at www.artiana.com

ARTIANA, UAE’s first home-grown auction house for art and luxury collectibles, is offering 40 artworks from the Indian subcontinent in their South Asian Art auction on March 12 to March 16. Showcasing a broad and inclusive range of fine works in various media such as oils, acrylics, and paper works, the auction feature works by modernist masters including members of the Progressive Artist’s Group (PAG) – M.F. Husain, S.H. Raza, F.N. Souza – and leading contemporary artists from the region like Paresh Maity and Jogen Chowdhury among others.  

Leading the auction is M.F. Husain’s ‘Perhaps these three horses are like three cheers to my Knighthood’ painted in 1989 with impeccable provenance, and another seminal work, ’Battle of Karbala’ painted in 1990. 

The collection also includes exceptional pieces from S.H. Raza providing a glimpse of the artist’s more spiritual works, including ‘Toi-Moi’ painted in 2004 which alludes to one of Sant Tukaram’s abhang and an almost monochromatic work titled ’Shanti-Bindu’ painted in 2001. A rare work from F. N. Souza from 1993 also features in the auction titled ‘Psychiatrist and Wife’ highlighting the artist’s virtuosity and commitment to his inner muse. 

ARTIANA will also offer various works from prominent artist Sakti Burman, along with Ram Kumar’s semi-abstracted landscapes, and Krishen Khanna’s bandwallahs. A collection of Jamil Naqsh’s works comprising of his signature subjects and calligraphy pieces are also part of the sale catalogue. 

The collection will be sold through an online auction at www.artiana.com from March 12 (6:00 pm) through March 16th (9:00 pm) UAE time with a No Buyer’s Premium policy in an essentially ‘What You Bid Is What You Pay’ format. FlexiPay which allows buyers to ‘Bid Now Pay Later’ will also be available for eligible clients. (FlexiPay scheme details are available on their website.)

The catalogue can be viewed online, and viewings can be arranged by prior appointment. Collectors may place bids at ARTIANA’s website, or through the mobile app available on both Google Play for Android and the App Store for Apple devices.

For information on how to register and bid, visit their website at www.artiana.com; For assistance and inquiries, call Artiana’s Help Desk at +971 55 815 3030 or write to [email protected]

Auction Catalogue – South Asian Art – ‘Modern and Contemporary’ – March 12 -16, 2020

In Memoriam | Akbar Padamsee

It is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of one of South Asia’s eminent artists, Akbar Padamsee.

One of the primary figures of Indian art, he made a career defined by free-thinking, experimentation and individuality. He worked on a wide variety of media but focused on a few chosen genres including prophets, heads, couples, still-life, grey works, metascapes and mirror images.

In his passing, he left behind a stellar legacy of masterpieces from his almost seven-decade long career. But shall always be remembered as one of the greats who put Indian art into the world stage and shattered preconceived notions of what Indian art should be and could be.

Relentless and dedicated to his craft until the end, he candidly said in one of his last interviews, “It is not possible to master the art of painting in such a short lifetime. I have been a painter in my past births and I am continuing the tradition.”

ARTIANA – F.N. Souza Works on Paper Auction | Auction Results

Our recently concluded Francis Newton Souza: Works on Paper auction was a success, with 62% of the lots sold and USD 173,400 total sales.

For the complete auction result and analysis, please visit www.artiana.com.

Thank you for your bids! 

Auction Catalogue – F.N. Souza Works on Paper – The Ravi and Uma Jain Collection – 5 – 9 December 2020

ARTIANA – Highlights – Lot 50 – F.N. Souza Works on Paper – Online Auction – No Buyer’s Premium – 5-9 December 2019

Untitled (Flying Angel) – 1993 – acrylic on paper – 14.75 x 21.5 in. (37.6 x 54.6 cm.)

The current lot is reminiscent of the artist’s ‘Figures in Landscape, Freeport, Bahamas’ which was painted in 1971 and evokes the feeling of enjoying under the sun and lazing on the beach. F.N. Souza used bright sunlit colors to portray a sense of lightness that is so dissimilar from his usual and dark palette choices. Aside from the uncharacteristic palette choice, the picture appears to have been executed perfunctorily without much attention to details of the figure.

Auction Catalogue – F.N. Souza Works on Paper – The Ravi and Uma Jain Collection – 5 – 9 December 2020

ARTIANA – Highlights – Lot 46 – F.N. Souza Works on Paper – Online Auction – No Buyer’s Premium – 5-9 December 2019

F.N. Souza routinely came back to his favorite motifs throughout his career. A recurrent theme of his works was the conflicts in man-woman relationships with an emphasis on sexual tension and friction, as seen in the current image executed in 1974. 

Untitled (1974) -pen and ink on paper – 10.75 x 7.75 in. (27.1 x 19.9 cm.)

In the drawing, he was able to maintain an excellent economy on his use of line while still managing to capture fine details. He employed an abundance of detailing, which made up the overall structure of his subjects. Disfigured and malformed, this image of a couple was part of the ‘mutant’ studies that Souza did in conjecture with nuclear warfare in what he predicted as the eventual downfall of man.

Auction Catalogue – F.N. Souza Works on Paper – The Ravi and Uma Jain Collection – 5 – 9 December 2020

ARTIANA – Highlights – Lot 43 – F.N. Souza Works on Paper – Online Auction – No Buyer’s Premium – 5-9 December 2019

Untitled (1972) – chemical alterations on paper – 13.25 x 10.25 in. (33.4 x 26.2 cm.)

After F.N. Souza left London in 1967, he lived in New York, where he continued to experiment with new ways of creating landscapes and figurative works. His painting in the following decades included uniquely rendered chemical drawings that demonstrate color palettes of vivid hues, as seen in the current image.

Souza’s women were frankly sexual and shockingly exposed themselves. In each of his works, they become more and more voluptuous, and all the more revealing and sordid. Conversely, his women are awe-inspiring in their unabashed display and ownership of their sexuality, yet on the flip side is Souza’s belief in women as objects of sexual gratification.

Auction Catalogue – F.N. Souza Works on Paper – The Ravi and Uma Jain Collection – 5 – 9 December 2020