Jamini Roy
(1887 - 1972)
Untitled
Born in 1887 in a small village in Beliatore, Bankura district, West Bengal, Jamini Roy joined the Government School of Art, Kolkata in 1903. He began his career by painting in the Post-Impressionist genre of landscapes and portraits, very much in keeping with his training in a British academic system. Yet, by 1925, Roy had begun experimenting along the lines of popular bazaar paintings sold outside the Kalighat temple in Kolkata. By the early...
Born in 1887 in a small village in Beliatore, Bankura district, West Bengal, Jamini Roy joined the Government School of Art, Kolkata in 1903. He began his career by painting in the Post-Impressionist genre of landscapes and portraits, very much in keeping with his training in a British academic system. Yet, by 1925, Roy had begun experimenting along the lines of popular bazaar paintings sold outside the Kalighat temple in Kolkata. By the early 1930s, Roy made a complete switch to indigenous materials to paint on woven mats, cloth and wood coated with lime. The inspiration for painting on woven mats was the textures he found in Byzantine art, which he had seen in colour photographs. It occurred to him that painting on a woven mat might make for an interesting mosaic-like surface.
The Santhals, a tribal people who live in the rural districts of Bengal, were an important subject for Roy. A series of works done a decade before World War II is a very good example of how he captured the qualities that are a part of native folk painting and recombined them with those of his own. He fused the minimal brush strokes of the Kalighat style with elements of tribal art from Bengal (like that of the terracotta work found in the Bishnupur temple in Bengal, where terracotta was often composed into decorative units - some elaborate in design - over portals and across exterior walls of the temples).
Roy's rejection of the then modern style of painting and his foray into the realm of Bengali folk paintings marked a new beginning in the history of Indian modern art. The mother and child, Radha, and animals were painted in simple two-dimensional forms, with flat color application and an emphasis on the lines. The main subjects were often enclosed within decorative borders with motifs in the background. The figure of the Christ was also a subject that Roy often painted.
Roy held several one-man exhibitions and numerous group shows. His works can be found in several private and public collections, institutions and museums all over the world, including the Lalit Kala Academy in Delhi and museums in Germany and the United States of America.
He was honored with the Padma Bhushan in 1955. Jamini Roy died on 24 April 1972 in Kolkata, where he had lived all his life.
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Lot
3
of
55
SPRING LIVE AUCTION
13 MARCH 2024
Estimate
Rs 18,00,000 - 24,00,000
$21,955 - 29,270
Winning Bid
Rs 18,00,000
$21,951
(Inclusive of Buyer's Premium)
ARTWORK DETAILS
Jamini Roy
Untitled
Signed indistinctly in Bengali (lower right)
Tempera on cloth
14.25 x 24.5 in (36 x 62.5 cm)
NON-EXPORTABLE NATIONAL ART TREASURE
PROVENANCE Acquired before 1946 by Lt. Louis Hageman while flying "The Hump" during World War II ("The Hump" was a dangerous route taken by Allied pilots in World War II to the eastern end of the Himalayan Mountains over which they flew military transport aircraft from India to China to resupply the Chinese war effort of Chiang Kai-shek and US Army Air Forces based in China.) Thence by descent Freeman's, Philadelphia, 3 November 2013, lot 65 Private Collection, New Delhi
EXHIBITEDWays of Seeing Women Artists | Women as Muse , New Delhi: The Claridges, 12 February – 7 March 2021 PUBLISHEDWays of Seeing Women Artists | Women as Muse , New Delhi: DAG, 2021, p. 176 (illustrated)
Category: Painting
Style: Abstract
ARTWORK SIZE:
Height of Figure: 6'