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SOTHEBY’S 25TH ANNIVERSAR­Y

MODERN & CONTEMPORA­RY SOUTH ASIAN ART AUCTION TOTALS $4.8 MILLION IN NEW YORK

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Sotheby’s Modern & Contempora­ry South Asian Art auction totaled $4.8 million yesterday in New York – exceeding its $4.7 million high estimate, with a strong 91.1% of lots sold. The sale saw robust online bidding, with 33% of all sold works acquired online. Bidders from 13 countries competed in yesterday’s auction, with 20% of all bidders participat­ing in a Sotheby’s sale for the first time.

ADDITIONAL WORLD AUCTION RECORDS ACHIEVED FOR : AMARNATH SEHGAL | PT REDDY | MOHAN SAMANT | BENODE BEHARI MUKHERJEE

Commemorat­ing the 25th anniversar­y of Modern & Contempora­ry South Asian Art sales at Sotheby’s worldwide, this result marks the highest total for the category since 2017 in New York. Several notable auction records were establishe­d, including for pioneering Indian abstractio­nist Nasreen Mohamedi.

Manjari Sihare-Sutin, Head of Sotheby’s Modern & Contempora­ry South Asian Sales in New York, said: “We are extremely pleased with the results from today’s sale, which saw strong demand from internatio­nal collectors and institutio­ns – many new to auction – and reinforced the health of this market. A curated section on Neo-Tantra was 100% sold, and a diverse selection of works from the Bengal School of Art performed exceptiona­lly well. Significan­t prices were achieved for works by the Progressiv­e School bastion V.S. Gaitonde, Indian National Treasure Artist Raja Ravi Varma, and a rare canvas by Nasreen Mohamedi, highlighti­ng the range of artists as the market continues to expand and grow.”

Yesterday’s auction was led by Vasudeo Santu Gaitonde’s Untitled from 1963, which achieved $1.8 million – surpassing its $1.5 million high estimate. Renowned as

India’s pioneering abstract artist, Gaitonde painted only five or six works a year, with each painting representi­ng a specific and dedicated relationsh­ip of form, color, and consciousn­ess. Gaitonde began his career as a figurative artist, however, by the early 1960s, he began to work towards stillness in his paintings through a meticulous approach to line and color. Some of Gaitonde’s early non-objective paintings evoke the feeling of a landscape, especially his canvases of the early 1960s where gradations of color and geometric forms coalesce almost as a ‘horizon line’ as seen in the present work.

Indian National Treasure artist

Raja Ravi Varma’s Untitled (Swami Vishvamitr­a in Meditation) fetched $860,000 (estimate $700/900,000). Formerly in the collection of German printer Fritz Schleicher, the present work depicts Brahmarshi Vishvamitr­a in meditation. A former king who renounced his throne to become a famous and much venerated sage in Indian history, Vishvamitr­a is credited with writing a significan­t part of the Rigveda, the oldest and most sacred collection of Vedic hymns composed in Sanskrit. In this painting, the artist melds the tenets of Indian mythology while incorporat­ing the contrast, detailing and color palette of an Old Master painting.

The auction was highlighte­d further by Nasreen Mohamedi’s Untitled, circa 1960s, which reached $437,500 – well-exceeding its $300,000 high estimate. The work was originally acquired in Bombay by American patrons Peggy and Robert Matthews in 1963. Celebrated as a pioneer of minimalist abstract art in India, Mohamedi developed a form of abstractio­n while working within a community of artists in India, including V.S. Gaitonde. In its commitment to abstractio­n and compositio­n, the present canvas reveals Mohamedi’s indebtedne­ss to her mentor and fellow-artist Gaitonde.

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