Ganesh Haloi
(1936)
Untitled
"Isolation is the most important factor in these paintings. You are alone
with nature, and then you become part of it –you participate in it."
Ganesh Haloi's art has evolved through a series of transactions from pure
landscape to the innerscapes.
Even though it is abstract, Haloi's works and his motifs have precise
associations with the artist's psyche, his experiences and the upheavals
that have shaped him and...
"Isolation is the most important factor in these paintings. You are alone
with nature, and then you become part of it –you participate in it."
Ganesh Haloi's art has evolved through a series of transactions from pure
landscape to the innerscapes.
Even though it is abstract, Haloi's works and his motifs have precise
associations with the artist's psyche, his experiences and the upheavals
that have shaped him and his point of view. "Everything begins in pain,"
says Haloi. He maintains high standards craftsmanship and his construction
of tress, houses and the ambience of Kolkata that seems murky with a
suppressed strength. Some of his unforgettable work includes nature-scapes
painted on rice paper.
Born in 1936 in East Bengal, now, Bangladesh he migrated to Kolkata during
the partition. He graduated from Government College of Art & craft kolkata
in 1956 and joined Archaeological Survey of India as a Senior Artist. He was
deputed to work at Ajanta from 1957 to 1963. Then he joined Art College
Kolkata as a lecturer in 1964.
His initial work includes study of miniatures at Banasthali (Rajasthan) and copying
Ajanta frescoes for six years. While his earlier work is dominated with
landscapes, his later paintings reflect his introvert and philosophic
temperament. Haloi's work shows his preoccupation with the theme of
devastation or calamity and resilience.
Born in a district that is now a part of Bangladesh, his earlier memories of
the region are of Brahamaputra and delta region mixed with communal
holocaust, of partition.
"I try to fit the irregular movements of life into the artificial boundaries
of the paintings," he says. His perspective is that of a victim, but
tempered with a strong dose of philosophy, a tranquil acceptance. His use of
colours is thick, evoking thoughtful reminiscence with spontaneous ease.
Ganesh Haloi has won several awards including the Late R. N. Chakarborty
Memorial (ex principal) Gold Medal from the Government College of Art,
Kolkata (1956), the seven silver medals from Kolkata University (1953,
1954, 1955).
Gold medals from the Academy of Fine Arts, Kolkata (1955, 1956, 1957, 1963,
1964, 1966, and 1970).
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Lot
145
of
202
WINTER ONLINE AUCTION
13-14 DECEMBER 2023
Estimate
Rs 15,00,000 - 20,00,000
$18,075 - 24,100
Winning Bid
Rs 16,80,000
$20,241
(Inclusive of Buyer's Premium)
ARTWORK DETAILS
Ganesh Haloi
Untitled
Signed and dated in Bengali and signed further 'Ganesh Haloi' (lower right); signed and dated 'Ganesh Haloi 1996' (on the reverse)
1996
Gouache on rice paper pasted on mount board
28.75 x 15 in (73 x 38 cm)
PROVENANCE Saffronart, 23-24 January 2013, lot 72 a) Private Collection, New Delhi
EXHIBITEDIndian Abstracts: An Absence of Form , New Delhi: DAG, 11 August – 30 September 2014, Mumbai: DAG, 7 December 2014 – 5 February 2015; New York: DAG, 13 June – 12 September 2015 PUBLISHED Kishore Singh ed., Indian Abstracts: An Absence of Form , New Delhi: DAG, 2014, p. 201 (illustrated)A Visual History of Indian Modern Art, Volume Four: Bengal Modernists , New Delhi: DAG, 2015, p. 740 (illustrated)
Category: Painting
Style: Abstract
ARTWORK SIZE:
Height of Figure: 6'