Tyeb Mehta
(1925 - 2009)
Untitled
Painted in 1961, during his stay in England, the present lot is representative of one of the earliest phases of Tyeb Mehta's figuration, before he turned to the sharp lines, bisecting diagonals and flat expanses of colour that became the hallmarks of his later works. In these early paintings, Mehta layered his canvases thickly with expressionist brushstrokes out of which his solitary subjects seemed to be etched. Rather than the explicit...
Painted in 1961, during his stay in England, the present lot is representative of one of the earliest phases of Tyeb Mehta's figuration, before he turned to the sharp lines, bisecting diagonals and flat expanses of colour that became the hallmarks of his later works. In these early paintings, Mehta layered his canvases thickly with expressionist brushstrokes out of which his solitary subjects seemed to be etched. Rather than the explicit violence and fractured forms of his unforgiving goddesses and falling figures, these men and women were apprehensive and unmoving, their features indiscernible and their bodies aged and flaccid. Like passive victims, frozen in the moment they were captured by the artist, they seemed to have surrendered to their fate and to the violence of their time. Like his later works, these early paintings are shaped by the artist's experiences of violence, particularly his memories of the brutal Partition of India that he lived through in his childhood. It is not surprising, then, that Mehta's works are populated by figures suspended in agony and distress, their mouths twisted in anguish, their limbs petrified, and their bodies awkwardly distended. Contemplating the artist's works from the 1960s, the poet Nissim Ezekiel noted that they "…create an ethos of brooding, sombre consciousness for which there is no equivalent, so far as I know, in modern Indian painting. These are paintings that pose unanswered and unanswerable questions about the human condition…That is their moral authority" (Tyeb Mehta, Kunika Chemould Art Center exhibition catalogue, 1970, not paginated). Ranjit Hoskote elaborates, noting that, "In the earliest years of this first phase of his art, Tyeb's protagonists communicated the seismic unease of fugitives, refugees, survivors, individuals ill at ease in their ethos, their bodies like squared-up masses held firm by rope-thick outlines" (Ranjit Hoskote, "Images of Transcendence: Towards a New Reading of Tyeb Mehta's Art", Tyeb Mehta: Ideas Images Exchanges, Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi, 2005, p. 5). The present lot is an important example of this early phase in Mehta's oeuvre, and stands testimony to his preoccupation with the figure throughout his career. Here, the artist uses an almost monochromatic palette to portray a seated female figure, seemingly lost in contemplation. The solitary subject's face with its forlorn features speaks of defeat and grief. Her body only echoes this despondency; while one arm pillows her head, the other rests on her raised knee, as if unable to rise against the weight of the despair that has descended around her.
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Lot
37
of
70
WINTER ONLINE AUCTION: MODERN INDIAN ART
18-19 DECEMBER 2012
Estimate
Rs 1,60,00,000 - 1,90,00,000
$301,890 - 358,495
ARTWORK DETAILS
Tyeb Mehta
Untitled
1961
Oil on canvas
48.5 x 38.5 in (123.2 x 97.8 cm)
PROVENANCE: Bear Lane Gallery, Oxford
EXHIBITED AND PUBLISHED: Indian Painting Now, Arts Council, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1965 EXHIBITED: South Asian Artists at Work in London, Bear Lane Gallery, London, 1965 PUBLISHED: Tyeb Mehta: Ideas, Images, Exchanges, Ranjit Hoskote, Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi, 2005 "Tyeb Mehta", George Butcher, The Guardian, 1965
Category: Painting
Style: Figurative
ARTWORK SIZE:
Height of Figure: 6'