Amrita Sher-Gil - Indian Art News https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com News on Modern and Contemporary Indian Art presented by Visions Art Tue, 19 Sep 2023 05:33:39 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://i0.wp.com/indianartnews.visionsarts.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/cropped-Visions-Art.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Amrita Sher-Gil - Indian Art News https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com 32 32 136536861 Amrita Sher-Gil’s ‘The Story Teller’ Sets New Record with ₹61.8 Crore Sale https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/amrita-sher-gils-the-story-teller-sets-new-record-with-%e2%82%b961-8-crore-sale/ https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/amrita-sher-gils-the-story-teller-sets-new-record-with-%e2%82%b961-8-crore-sale/#respond Tue, 19 Sep 2023 05:33:36 +0000 https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/?p=1300 In a groundbreaking moment for the art world, Amrita Sher-Gil’s masterpiece, ‘The Story Teller,’ has achieved an astounding ₹61.8 crore at auction, securing its place as the most expensive …

The post Amrita Sher-Gil’s ‘The Story Teller’ Sets New Record with ₹61.8 Crore Sale first appeared on Indian Art News.

]]>
In a groundbreaking moment for the art world, Amrita Sher-Gil’s masterpiece, ‘The Story Teller,’ has achieved an astounding ₹61.8 crore at auction, securing its place as the most expensive Indian artwork ever sold globally. This remarkable feat surpasses Sayed Haider Raza’s ‘Gestation,’ which held the previous record.

Fetching a whopping ₹61.8 crore, avant-garde artist Amrita Sher-gil’s oil on canvas “The Story teller”

This extraordinary 1937 oil-on-canvas artwork found its new owner during the Saffronart’s ‘Evening Sale: Modern Art’ event held in New Delhi. The auction featured over 70 exceptional artworks by renowned artists, including MF Husain, VS Gaitonde, Jamini Roy, and FS Souza.

It was only a month ago that Sayed Haider Raza’s ‘Gestation,’ created in 1989 and also an oil-on-canvas painting, was sold for ₹51.75 crore by Pundole’s auction house in Mumbai, marking a historic milestone in the Indian art auction scene.

Dinesh Vazirani, CEO and co-founder of Saffronart, expressed his delight, stating, “We are thrilled to have achieved multiple artist records at our Evening Sale in New Delhi this September. The record-breaking price achieved for Amrita Sher-Gil’s ‘The Story Teller’ is a significant moment in the Indian art market, a testament to the artist’s remarkable talent and enduring legacy as one of India’s artistic treasures.”

‘The Story Teller,’ recognized as one of the twelve artworks handpicked by Amrita Sher-Gil herself as her most significant creations, is celebrated for its authenticity and profound expressiveness. The central focus of the artist’s work primarily revolves around women, as she found it easiest to connect empathetically with their experiences. The painting was originally showcased at Sher-Gil’s highly successful solo exhibition at Faletti’s Hotel, Lahore, in November 1937.

Amrita Sher-Gil’s portfolio includes other renowned portraits of women such as ‘Three Girls,’ ‘Women on the Charpai,’ ‘Hill Women,’ and ‘Young Girls.’

Born in Budapest, Hungary, on January 30, 1913, to an Indian father and Hungarian mother, Amrita Sher-Gil is widely regarded as one of the most influential avant-garde female artists. She displayed a passion for drawing and watercolor painting from the tender age of five. In 1921, her family relocated to India, settling in Shimla. It was during this period that she refined her observational skills, capturing the essence of her surroundings through meticulous sketches. Tragically, she passed away at the young age of 28 in 1941.

In 1976, the Archaeological Survey of India honored Amrita Sher-Gil as one of India’s nine ‘National Art Treasure’ artists, recognizing her profound contribution to the country’s artistic heritage.

The post Amrita Sher-Gil’s ‘The Story Teller’ Sets New Record with ₹61.8 Crore Sale first appeared on Indian Art News.

]]>
https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/amrita-sher-gils-the-story-teller-sets-new-record-with-%e2%82%b961-8-crore-sale/feed/ 0 1300
India Art Fair: The female artists leading the country’s art renaissance https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/india-art-fair-female-artists-leading-countrys-art-renaissance/ https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/india-art-fair-female-artists-leading-countrys-art-renaissance/#respond Sat, 10 Feb 2018 08:09:24 +0000 http://www.indianartnews.info/?p=1009 The 2018 India Art Fair is set to showcase work by some of South Asia’s best contemporary female artists. Among them are Mithu Sen, whose paintings and installations explore …

The post India Art Fair: The female artists leading the country’s art renaissance first appeared on Indian Art News.

]]>
The 2018 India Art Fair is set to showcase work by some of South Asia’s best contemporary female artists. Among them are Mithu Sen, whose paintings and installations explore desire, eroticism and sexuality; Tayeba Lipi, a multimedia artist who broaches hard-hitting topics like feminism and transgender rights; and Tanya Goel, who makes her own pigments when creating soaring abstract paintings.

This is just a snapshot of female talent found across the four-day program — and the region at large.

A woman roams through last year's India Art Fair.
A woman roams through last year’s India Art Fair. Credit: Andy Barnham

Despite their growing international stature, many of South Asia’s artists still seem to be rooted in their local and personal contexts

Women have long played a crucial role in the region’s arts scene, but many have faced — and continue to face challenges resulting from gender bias, whether it is difficulty finding opportunities to train or sell art, or a lack of critical recognition. This can be reflected in their work, which is often introspective, revealing the social hardships and tensions faced by many female artists.

Tayeba Lipi is a multimedia artist who broaches hard-hitting topics like feminism and transgender rights in her work. Here she uses stainless steel razors as a medium.
Tayeba Lipi is a multimedia artist who broaches hard-hitting topics like feminism and transgender rights in her work. Here she uses stainless steel razors as a medium. Credit: Courtesy Shrine Empire

 The earlier generations found their opportunities particularly limited, and their contributions have only recently been recognized as part of our art history.

Nalini Malani, for example, was ahead of her time in embracing film and video from the late 1960s, but her early works were largely disregarded and failed to receive the acknowledgement or exposure they deserved.

That said, there were exceptions to the rule. While reportedly disliked for her outspoken nature, pioneering Hungarian-Indian painter Amrita Sher-Gil overcame the barriers facing women in pre-war India to occupy a unique position in the country’s art history as one of its most prominent modernists.

Her work inspired a whole family of artists, including her nephew Vivan Sundaram, who is the subject of a 50-year retrospective at New Delhi’s impressive Kiran Nadar Museum of Art during India Art Fair.

Amrita Sher-Gil is considered one of the most prominent modernist artists in India's art history.
Amrita Sher-Gil is considered one of the most prominent modernist artists in India’s art history. Credit: The Sher-Gil Archives and Photoink

Pioneering women

The problems women face are not unique to India. But as someone who has worked in media and the arts for over a decade, what is evident to me is that in India, like in many other developing creative hubs, women are also playing a central role in evolving the arts ecosystem.

In the past decade, it has been thoroughly encouraging to see greater prominence given to female artists in exhibitions, museum shows and collections around the world.

Artist Nalini Malani has been using video as an artistic medium for decades. Above is an image of her video-shadow play "In Search of Vanished Blood," on display in Germany in 2012.
Artist Nalini Malani has been using video as an artistic medium for decades. Above is an image of her video-shadow play “In Search of Vanished Blood,” on display in Germany in 2012. Credit: AFP/AFP/AFP/Getty Images

The aforementioned Nalini Malani was the subject of a retrospective at the Centre Pompidou in Paris, while Nasreen Mohamedi’s influential abstract drawings were recently showcased at The Met Breuer in New York.

The younger generation is more likely to explicitly addresses social issues faced by women in the country today. Among them are a number of artists exhibiting at India Art Fair week, including photographer Gauri Gill, whose 2012 exhibition “Transportraits: Women and Mobility in the City,” explored women’s personal safety on the streets and public transport.

But India’s female artists are also making a name for themselves through a huge variety of non-gendered topics. One prominent example is “My East is Your West” at the 2015 Venice Biennale, one of the most prestigious art events in the world (and one where the subcontinent has traditionally been under-represented). The exhibition saw Indian artist Shilpa Gupta collaborate with a male artist from Pakistan to reflect on the complex relations between their two countries.

A view of "My East is Your West" at the 2015 Venice Biennale in Italy.
A view of “My East is Your West” at the 2015 Venice Biennale in Italy. Credit: Awakening/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images for The Gujral Foun

A thriving sector

Beyond individual artists, women in the wider arts sector are now a real driving force. India’s female-led organizations span artist collectives, commercial galleries and non-profit foundations, from across the length and breadth of the country.

Through a combination of entrepreneurialism and interdisciplinary collaboration, women have helped bring about respect, critical acclaim and international recognition for the organizations they lead. And I’m delighted that a number of these non-profit organizations will be represented at India Art Fair this year — many for the first time.

 

One of the featured works of art from last year's India Art Fair.
One of the featured works of art from last year’s India Art Fair. Credit: Andy Barnham

 Of them, art collector and philanthropist Kiran Nadar, who supports artists through her foundation and museum in Delhi, is an incredible example of what is being achieved across the country. Elsewhere, we find pioneering figures like Hena Kapadia, director of Tarq, a relatively new gallery in Mumbai.

This year Tarq took on the leadership of Mumbai Gallery Weekend (an event that is growing in stature and significance with each edition), and the organization will present an all-female booth at this year’s India Art Fair.

"Descent into Nidra" by Rithika Merchant, represented by Mumbai-based gallery Tarq.
“Descent into Nidra” by Rithika Merchant, represented by Mumbai-based gallery Tarq. Credit: Courtesy Tarq

 At the other end of the commercial spectrum is Shireen Gandhy who, as director of Chemould Prescott Road, has added dynamism and variety to the gallery’s programming. And, under the leadership of Pooja Sood, the international artists’ association KHOJ remains a key player in the Delhi arts scene, facilitating dialogue between practitioners through its workshops and residency program.

 

It’s clear to me that, despite the strength of its artists’ output and the commitment of its organizations, India has not yet achieved the recognition it deserves. But 2018 is a fascinating moment to be involved in the arts here — a sense of momentum is building.

And while the success of India’s art world will not be solely defined by gender issues, it’s nonetheless exciting to see that it’s being driven by the country’s women.

India Art Fair will run from February 9-12, 2018.
Jagdip Jagpal is the director of this year’s India Art Fair.
Credits : https://edition.cnn.com/style/article/india-art-fair-jagdip-jagpal/index.html

The post India Art Fair: The female artists leading the country’s art renaissance first appeared on Indian Art News.

]]>
https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/india-art-fair-female-artists-leading-countrys-art-renaissance/feed/ 0 1009