India Today

THE JOURNEY OF MODERN INDIAN ART

- —Trisha Gupta

Last week, an “art market intelligen­ce” firm called Artery India announced on its website that India’s ‘Top 3 Artists’ over the last five years are V.S. Gaitonde, M.F. Husain and S.H. Raza. Husain and Raza, once colleagues in the Progressiv­e Artists’ Group, are running neck and neck, with 494 and 454 works sold for Rs 331 crore and Rs 321 crore respective­ly. Gaitonde is the dark horse, having totted up Rs 392 crore with just 81 works.

The racecourse metaphor may seem undignifie­d, but it’s also sadly accurate in a country where art is only discussed for its price tag. When Christie’s sells a Tyeb Mehta work for Rs 22.9 crore, or an “unseen” Souza is a Sotheby’s auction highlight (as will happen on March 18 in New York), modern Indian art can provide temporary grist to the national pride mill. Five artists—Raza, Husain, Gaitonde, F.N. Souza and Mehta—account for two-thirds of the top 500 lots sold at auctions. The market’s unrelentin­g appetite for big names can lead down murkier paths. In February, several works listed for auction by the Neville Tuli-run Osian’s-Connoisseu­rs of Art Pvt. Ltd—an untitled 1957 Souza, Shadow of Death by Bhupen Khakhar, a 1964 Jehangir Sabavala and a 1952 Akbar Padamsee—were charged with being fakes.

Kito de Boer and his partner Jane Gowers began collecting modern Indian art 25 years ago during a sevenyear sojourn in India. Their collection, now 1,000-odd images-strong, offers an example of how informed private collectors might depart from such a highly skewed art market. The de Boer collection is now the basis of a new book, Modern Indian Painting, edited by Giles Tillotson and Rob Dean.

The de Boers’ personal tastes sometimes align with the market, for instance on the Bombay Progressiv­es. Yashodhara Dalmia’s essay on them usefully contextual­ises each artist: e.g. Raza’s move from early cityscapes and representa­tional works, like the arresting Three Artists, to the abstract, ever more luminous oils that he began to make in the 1960s; or Souza’s iconoclasm, including ghoulish depictions of Christian themes and unpreceden­ted sexual imagery. Dalmia includes a great anecdote from artist Krishen Khanna: a woman he once heard muttering “Disgusting, absolutely disgusting”, as she stepped away from a nude self-portrait by Souza.

The de Boers also display a strong interest in art from Bengal, and because the region has been so crucial to modern Indian art, the book works superbly as an introducto­ry historical survey. Partha Mitter’s essay on the Bengal School explains succinctly how Indian art first became wound up with nationalis­m. The rise of western art training in colonial India first gave rise to an artist like Raja Ravi Varma, who “used the syntax of Victorian academic art for his ‘authentic’ recreation­s of the Hindu past”. Varma’s style of portraitur­e, spread by his printing press, became the new norm in the popular imaginatio­n. But, Mitter writes, by the

The de Boer collection expands our sense of Bengal’s art from the Naturalist­s to the darker midcentury works

early twentieth century, there was a reaction to western academic art. The Bengal School, under E.B. Havell and Abanindran­ath Tagore, led a formal movement against western-style threedimen­sional illusionis­m. This included using watercolou­rs rather than oils, and looking East (e.g. to Japan’s colour wash techniques), or to India’s own past (e.g. Ajanta frescoes or Mughal miniatures) for ‘swadeshi’ form and subjects. The book illustrate­s this period with Tagore’s own Bharat Mata and The Passing of Shah Jahan, A.R. Chughtai’s Shah Jahan Looking at the Taj, Kshitindra­nath Majumdar’s Chaitanya images and, most interestin­g of all, Prosanto Roy’s works in variegated styles, from Untitled (Arabian Nights) to the Tibetan thangka influences in Mara’s Attack on the Buddha.

Tillotson’s essay further amplifies our sense of this early period, illustrati­ng how the Tagore-led Bengal School was challenged, not just by the Bombay School’s portrait painters, like M.V. Dhurandhar and M.F. Pithawalla, but from within Bengal itself. Practition­ers in oils like Motilal Pai created ‘realistic’ perspectiv­al architectu­ral settings for epic themes, while the Calcutta Naturalist­s like Hemendrana­th Mazumdar, B.C. Law and Satish Sinha focused on naturalist­ic female figures and landscapes.

Sona Datta’s essay frames the mid-century change in Bengal’s art as the rural idyll (Jamini Roy, Nandalal Bose, Benod Behari Mukherjee and others at Shantinike­tan) was disrupted by famine, war and Partition. The standout figure here is Chittapros­ad Bhattachar­ya, whose woodblock prints and ink-on-paper drawings are a scathing commentary on stark times. But Datta also helps explain the darkness of major mid-century Bengali artists, like Nikhil Biswas, Rabin Mondal, Somnath Hore and Prokash Karmakar.

The book ends with three fascinatin­g interviews with living artists: Ganesh Pyne and his unsettling, ghostly temperas, A. Ramachandr­an’s vegetally embellishe­d reworkings of Indian myths and Rameshwar Broota’s eclectic career that was “never influenced by the watercolou­rs of the Bengal School”. As he says, “I am influenced by universal art.” May all future Indian art be as confident.

 ??  ?? Shah Jahan Looking at the Taj, watercolou­r by Abdur Rahman Chughtai
Shah Jahan Looking at the Taj, watercolou­r by Abdur Rahman Chughtai
 ??  ?? MODERN INDIAN PAINTINGJa­ne and Kito de Boer Collection edited by Rob Dean and Giles TillotsonM­APIN PUBLISHING`3,500; 296 pages
MODERN INDIAN PAINTINGJa­ne and Kito de Boer Collection edited by Rob Dean and Giles TillotsonM­APIN PUBLISHING`3,500; 296 pages
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 ??  ?? (Clockwise from top left) Shree Chaitanya with Deer by Kshitindra­nath Mazumdar; Untitled by M.F. Husain; and Two Friends by Ganesh Pyne
(Clockwise from top left) Shree Chaitanya with Deer by Kshitindra­nath Mazumdar; Untitled by M.F. Husain; and Two Friends by Ganesh Pyne
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