M F Husain
(1915 - 2011)
Untitled
M.F. Husain has always been passionate about India and its people, and a deep humanism has informed his creative process since he began to paint in the 1940s. With his unique modern idiom, firmly rooted in India, Husain confidently “delivers the common man from the ordinariness of his existence to the international arena” (Yashodhara Dalmia, The Making of Modern Indian Art: The Progressives, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2001, p. 101)....
M.F. Husain has always been passionate about India and its people, and a deep humanism has informed his creative process since he began to paint in the 1940s. With his unique modern idiom, firmly rooted in India, Husain confidently “delivers the common man from the ordinariness of his existence to the international arena” (Yashodhara Dalmia, The Making of Modern Indian Art: The Progressives, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2001, p. 101). Though he is an almost entirely self-taught artist, today, Husain’s accessible and provocative work continues to ensure a place for him among India’s most popular and critically acclaimed artists.
Like the subjects of Husain’s earlier works that drew extensively from India’s folk art and craft traditions, the figures portrayed in this significant canvas from 2002 “are shorn of all mystique” and yet “imbued with an aura that they bring from their rootedness to the earth. The strong bright colours, applied with jagged strokes on the canvas and placed according to the mood invoked, bring in all the sights and sounds of the street and with it all the multiplicity of life in India.” (Ibid.). Using a palette of ochre and blue to reflect the land and the sky, the artist breathes life into his dream of expressing the multiple realities of India on canvas, especially the rural ones of his own childhood in a small village in Maharashtra.
Echoing his seminal 1960 canvas, Farmer’s Family, now in the collection of the National Gallery of Modern Art in New Delhi, here, an able-bodied farming family is depicted celebrating the harvest, a commemorative theme that Husain also explored in the series of Holi paintings he executed during the 1950s and 60s. As nurturers of the land and guardians of its fertility, these undemanding farmers provide the sustenance on which the rest of the nation depends, and are held in high esteem by the artist.
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Lot
47
of
140
SUMMER AUCTION 2008
18-19 JUNE 2008
Estimate
$300,000 - 350,000
Rs 1,20,00,000 - 1,40,00,000
USD payment only.
Why?
ARTWORK DETAILS
M F Husain
Untitled
Signed and dated in English (lower left)
2002
Acrylic on canvas
72 x 48 in (182.9 x 121.9 cm)
EXHIBITED AND PUBLISHED: Aspects of Modern Indian Painting, Saffronart and Pundole Art Gallery, New York, 2002
Category: Painting
Style: Figurative
ARTWORK SIZE:
Height of Figure: 6'