S H Raza
(1922 - 2016)
Untitled (Venice)
Painted in 1952, two years after S H Raza had moved
to Paris, the present lot reflects a brief but significant
point in the artist’s career when he was departing from
his earlier expressionist style toward a more Cubist
approach. During his early years in France, Raza travelled
to the southern countryside (where he would later settle
down), as well as parts of Spain and Italy. Likely inspired
by his two month sojourn in Italy, this work...
Painted in 1952, two years after S H Raza had moved
to Paris, the present lot reflects a brief but significant
point in the artist’s career when he was departing from
his earlier expressionist style toward a more Cubist
approach. During his early years in France, Raza travelled
to the southern countryside (where he would later settle
down), as well as parts of Spain and Italy. Likely inspired
by his two month sojourn in Italy, this work depicts a
scene in Venice, and is a rare and unusual choice for the
artist who mainly focussed on the French landscape.
Painted in gouache—Raza’s preferred medium at the
time—it portrays a picturesque vision of the city with its
tightly nested buildings set against the dark canal waters
and a night sky, as gondolas float in the foreground. True
to his method, Raza deliberately avoids portraying any
sign of human life in this work. “They are not “views”
as seen from a particular point, but an affirmation of a
pictorial truth.” (Jacques Riols, “Indian Artists in Paris: S.H.
Raza Develops a New Style,” The Sunday Statesman, 1
November 1953)
Through his travels, Raza was exposed to medieval
European art, which he had little chance to study in India.
He was particularly influenced by Byzantine painting,
Romanesque sculpture, and the pre?Renaissance painters
of the Sienese School such as Ambrogio Lorenzetti and
Simone Martini. According to critic Rudy von Leyden,
they “appealed to him in their austerity which was capable
of conveying the most exquisite poetic sensitivity.” (Raza,
Bombay: Sadanga Publications, 1959, p. 18)
In works such as the present lot, the artist possibly drew
inspiration from the bright colours and spatial structure
of Sienese paintings, such as Lorenzetti’s City by the Sea,
circa 1340, or Martini’s Guidoriccio da Fogliano at the Siege
of Montemassi,1328?30 (see below). The architectural
setting, flat perspective and delineated structure also
hark back to the fine compositions of Indian miniature
paintings, “with the one difference that, while the
miniatures are essentially illustrative, Raza’s paintings
create an image. They do not tell a story, they exist.” (Von
Leyden, p. 18)
Raza’s primary influence, however, both in subject and
style during this period, can be traced to the European
master Paul Cézanne, whose works he was introduced
to by the French photographer Henri Cartier?Bresson.
Cartier?Bresson had seen Raza’s work in 1948 and had
found it full of "colour and emotion," but observed that
it lacked construction. He said to Raza, “...a painting is
constructed like a building on a sound base with walls,
base, roof, doors, windows and if it does not have these
it is fragile. Paintings are in a way similar; you have to
construct a painting with a sense of geometry. Remember
the name Paul Cézanne, he mastered construction
in painting. His paintings are testimony to his sense of
structure.” (Quoted in Ranjit Hoskote, Ashok Vajpeyi,
Yashodhara Dalmia and Avni Doshi, Vistaar: S H Raza,
Mumbai: Art Musings, 2012, p. 138) This meeting with
Cartier?Bresson fundamentally changed the direction of
Raza’s art.
Raza’s works, including the present lot, demonstrate
a synthesis of these medieval and contemporary
influences, but in a style entirely his own. “It was in 1952
that I saw the first works of Raza, recently arrived in
Paris from India. They were strange and unusual works:
timeless landscapes, uninhabited cities detached from
the earth, bathed in cold light. Schematized houses
were linked one to another in an endless, sinuous chain...
Through an original separation of light and shadow,
Raza expressed the contrast of day and of night which
haunted him ceaselessly.” (Jacques Lassaigne, Art et
Architecture Actuels, No. 79, Paris: Cimaise, 1967)
Raza carried his childhood fascination with the lush
forests of Madhya Pradesh, where he grew up, and his love
of nature with him to Europe, which presented itself as
a new opportunity for exploration and experimentation.
He acquired a new understanding of the relationship
between form, colour and construction. This type of
landscape, which focused on methodical and detailed
structure, was new for the artist. “Over these works Raza
had taken infinite pains. Each shape was carefully related
to another, weighed, balanced till it had found its place
in the composition which would appear unshakeable.
Colour had undergone the most intricate studies to be
able to express the finest overtones of a poetic situation.
Because that is what these paintings really are: poetic
situations. They were as austere and sensitive as the
landscape backgrounds in the paintings of the Sienese
primitives with their garlands of houses, walls and
towers strung across the horizon.” (Von Leyden, p. 18)
The present lot was painted the same year in which
Raza exhibited for the first time in Paris, at a group
show with fellow artists F N Souza and Akbar Padamsee
at Galerie Saint?Placide. The success of this exhibition
was followed by several others, and Raza was widely
lauded in the French press during this period in the
early 1950s.
With its careful precision and charming composition,
works like Venice play an important role in marking
the plot points which would eventually lead to Raza’s
success as one of India’s earliest Modernists.
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Artist Profile
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Lot
13
of
89
SPRING ONLINE AUCTION
27-28 MARCH 2019
Estimate
$150,000 - 200,000
Rs 1,02,00,000 - 1,36,00,000
Winning Bid
$252,000
Rs 1,71,36,000
(Inclusive of Buyer's Premium)
USD payment only.
Why?
ARTWORK DETAILS
S H Raza
Untitled (Venice)
Signed and dated 'S. H. Raza 1952' (lower right)
1952
Gouache on paper
20.75 x 17.25 in (52.6 x 43.8 cm)
This work will be included in the forthcoming volume of the S H
Raza: Catalogue Raisonne, Early Works, compiled by Anne Macklin in
collaboration with the Raza Foundation
PROVENANCE
Acquired directly from the artist
Collection of Mr and Mrs Sorovsky, Paris
Category: Painting
Style: Landscape
ARTWORK SIZE:
Height of Figure: 6'