Arpita Singh
(1937)
Twenty-seven Ducks of Memory
"The world that I paint is part real, part naive; there are things that I see around - it could be as simple as telephones, aeroplanes, flowers or guns - and pair it with anything that I want to say at that moment." - ARPITA SINGH Arpita Singh's paintings are known for their vibrant depiction of people, and everyday objects frequently present as floating, recurring motifs. After graduating from the Delhi College of Art,...
"The world that I paint is part real, part naive; there are things that I see around - it could be as simple as telephones, aeroplanes, flowers or guns - and pair it with anything that I want to say at that moment." - ARPITA SINGH Arpita Singh's paintings are known for their vibrant depiction of people, and everyday objects frequently present as floating, recurring motifs. After graduating from the Delhi College of Art, she worked as a consulting designer with the Weavers' Service Centre, and her paintings often reflect the textures and ornamentation of textiles. "The relationship of Arpita Singh's paintings to textiles, imitating with paint the textile crafts - weaving, stitchery, embroidery, tapestry - fosters a deceptive sense of comfort... the rhythm of the repeated elements in Singh's paintings... while adding the lyricism of modern poetry or music, might also function as a sort of visible mantra, a means of transporting the artist - and perhaps the viewer - to another level of consciousness." (Betty Seid ed., New Narratives: Contemporary Art from India, Ahmedabad: Mapin Publishing Pvt. Ltd., 2007, p. 42) The motifs that Singh uses add both personal and political layers to the narratives she portrays. People appear in the top corners of the present lot - on the left, a group of men ride an aeroplane, while on the right is a supine, nude figure which the artist employs in her later paintings as "icon, as protagonist, sometimes naked - baring the postmenopausal sexuality of her body, as cavernous as it is vulnerable." (Nilima Sheikh, "Of target-flowers, spinal cords, and (un)veilings," Arpita Singh: Memory Jars, New York: Bose Pacia Modern, 2003) Both images, indicating departures and ageing, underscore the significance of memories as an antidote to the passage of time. A vast portion of the canvas is dominated by cloudy, dreamlike strokes - perhaps representing this nostalgia - embellished with motifs of ducks and numbers from 1 to 27. These, in addition to a clock, indicate the "ceaseless march of calendar dates... Humans may struggle to control time, tracking it incessantly with numbers, but it pushes ahead ceaselessly as the natural world progresses irrespective of the human... The images on the edges of Singh's pictures may function as footnotes or addendums to the main image, in these margins a fleeting thought or a whispered secret can be easily accommodated." (Peter Nagy, "The Simplest of Means of Arpita Singh," Arpita Singh: Memory Jars, New York: Bose Pacia Modern, 2003)
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Lot
10
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40
SPRING LIVE AUCTION | MUMBAI, LIVE
5 MARCH 2020
Estimate
Rs 1,20,00,000 - 1,80,00,000
$171,430 - 257,145
Winning Bid
Rs 84,00,000
$120,000
(Inclusive of Buyer's Premium)
ARTWORK DETAILS
Arpita Singh
Twenty-seven Ducks of Memory
Signed and dated 'ARPITA SINGH/ 1996, 96' (lower right)
1996
Oil on canvas
65.75 x 59.75 in (167 x 152 cm)
PROVENANCE Property from the Collection of Rashna Imhasly-Gandhy and Behroze Gandhy Christie's, Mumbai, 19 December 2013, lot 45
PUBLISHED Deepak Ananth, Arpita Singh , Gurgaon: Penguin Studio and New Delhi: Vadehra Art Gallery, 2015, p. 147 (illustrated)
Category: Painting
Style: Figurative
ARTWORK SIZE:
Height of Figure: 6'