Bikash Bhattacharjee
(1940 - 2006)
Untitled
Born in 1940, Bikash Bhattacharjee is renowned for the psychologically and physiologically improbable characters that populate his work. With one foot on each side of the line dividing academic realism from surrealism, and the mundane from the macabre and theatrical, the artist reflects his moods and memories through the environs and characters that he brings to life in his works. In the words of the critic, Marcella Sirhandi, Bhattacharjee is...
Born in 1940, Bikash Bhattacharjee is renowned for the psychologically and physiologically improbable characters that populate his work. With one foot on each side of the line dividing academic realism from surrealism, and the mundane from the macabre and theatrical, the artist reflects his moods and memories through the environs and characters that he brings to life in his works. In the words of the critic, Marcella Sirhandi, Bhattacharjee is “a consummate draftsman, whose skill brings to life a vivid imagination deeply rooted in Bengali culture.” (India: Contemporary Art from Northeastern Private Collections, J. V. Zimmerli Art Museum exhibition catalogue, 2002, p.32). His subjects are all average Bengalis, like himself, embodying the superstitions, corruption, religious beliefs, love and violence that the artist experienced growing up and living in the city of Kolkata.
Women, like the lone subject of the present lot, are rendered with a combination of spirituality, sensuality, and intimidation. In awe of their beauty and power, Bhattacharjee paints his women in a haunting light, often connecting their human femininity with divine authority, leaving viewers wondering what secrets they harbour. A master of oils, the artist is attentive to every detail in his portraits, believing that the more authentic the milieu in which his characters are, the more heightened will be their drama. In this large canvas from 1990, a woman in a sheer green sari stands frozen by a stagnant pond surrounded by foliage. Glowing with an eerie aura, the urban Bengali housewife seems out of place in this inert oasis of calm; the artist perhaps capturing her mid day-dream, in which she escapes, if only momentarily, from the dreary reality of her daily life.
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Lot
112
of
140
SUMMER AUCTION 2008
18-19 JUNE 2008
Estimate
Rs 45,00,000 - 55,00,000
$112,500 - 137,500
Winning Bid
Rs 52,90,000
$132,250
(Inclusive of Buyer's Premium)
ARTWORK DETAILS
Bikash Bhattacharjee
Untitled
Signed and dated in English (lower right)
1990
Oil on canvas
35 x 59.5 in (88.9 x 151.1 cm)
Category: Painting
Style: Figurative
ARTWORK SIZE:
Height of Figure: 6'