Ram Kumar
(1924 - 2018)
Untitled
Ram Kumar’s artistic career saw his landscapes evolving from realistic representations to abstract interpretations, pared down to colours and forms rather than depicting an identifiable location. In works such as the present lot, the artist “translates the landscape into a system of lines, planes, blocks; their machine-edged logic, entering into dialogue with texture and tone, govern the distribution of significant masses over the picture...
Ram Kumar’s artistic career saw his landscapes evolving from realistic representations to abstract interpretations, pared down to colours and forms rather than depicting an identifiable location. In works such as the present lot, the artist “translates the landscape into a system of lines, planes, blocks; their machine-edged logic, entering into dialogue with texture and tone, govern the distribution of significant masses over the picture space... He does not mirror reality, but subjects it to a prismatic analysis: his topography, for instance, is a diagram of forces in a field rather than a picturesque postcard view; each city, each trapfall is a summation of views from various angles, arranged on the same plane for the discernment of the viewer.” (Ranjit Hoskote, “The Poet of the Visionary Landscape,” Ram Kumar: A Journey Within , New Delhi: Vadehra Art Gallery, 1996, p. 38) Painted in 1989, this later abstract landscape by Ram Kumar offers few clues to the identity of the location being portrayed. Kumar was more concerned with capturing the essence of the place rather than depicting realistic cityscapes. Critic Richard Bartholomew alludes to this intangible quality in Kumar’s art - “When I see a Ram Kumar painting... I get the feeling that I’ve been there before... The very forms of the composition suggest that. The hard and the soft, the tangible and the elusive, the structure and the sensation... Ram’s work draws us into its field of vision, involving us visually, stimulating us to see this detail or that... There is great depth, in perspective and feeling. The experience encountered is extremely refined. A reductive principle in composition and an immaculate technique determine the scale.” (Richard Bartholomew, “Ram Kumar ‘73,” Rati Bartholomew, Carmen Kagal and Rosalyn D’Mello eds., Richard Bartholomew: The Art Critic , New Delhi: Bart, 2012, p. 536) The present lot, with its focus on the language of painting, evokes just such a sense of place, without specifying what that place might be.
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Lot
28
of
55
SPRING LIVE AUCTION: MODERN INDIAN ART
6 APRIL 2022
Estimate
Rs 55,00,000 - 75,00,000
$73,335 - 100,000
Winning Bid
Rs 86,40,000
$115,200
(Inclusive of Buyer's Premium)
ARTWORK DETAILS
Ram Kumar
Untitled
Signed and dated 'Ram Kumar 89' (on the reverse)
1989
Oil on canvas
33 x 48 in (84 x 121.7 cm)
PROVENANCE Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi Private Collection, Mumbai
Category: Painting
Style: Abstract
ARTWORK SIZE:
Height of Figure: 6'