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Reflecting
back on our first sale of modern and contemporary
Indian art in New York which took place in 2000
and realized $600,000, todays event was
a tremendous testimonial to the buoyancy and the
energy of Indian art, its collectors and its supporters,
said Yamini Mehta, Head of Modern and Contemporary
Indian Art.
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prices in todays sale were achieved for established as well
as contemporary artists. An extraordinary group of works by Francis
Newton Souza from the collection of the British epicurean, businessman
and connoisseur, Robin Howard CBE, was among the major highlights.
His majestic Man and Woman, 1954 achieved $1,360,000, more than
quadrupling its pre-sale estimate while Nyasa Negress with Flowers
and Thorns doubled her pre-sale figure when the painting fetched
$856,000. Two more Souza works, Untitled (Spanish Landscape), 1960
and Row of Red Houses with Trees, 1957 sold for respectively $688,000
and $374,400.
Tyeb
Mehta, one of the most coveted artists in the field, was presented
with Untitled (Figures with Bull Head), circa 1987. This impressive
composition in yellows, greens and shades of grey which pre-figures
Mehtas obsession with the Goddess Durga, realized $1,136,000
and was acquired by an Indian private collector.
Property
from Madame Krishna Riboud included two superb works by Vasudeo
S. Gaitonde which also performed at high levels. Untitled, 1971
achieved $688,000 and the second Untitled Green Mountain
painted in the same year realized $632,000. Widely traveled,
with impeccable taste, Indian-born Krishna Riboud became one of
Frances most avid supporters of avant-garde art, exploring
a passion which was extraordinarily eclectic and broad but also
focused on work by her fellow countrymen in a time when Indian artists
were relatively unknown outside of their native country. A descendant
of the Tagores, one of Indias most renowned artistic families,
her infallible sense of beauty and rarity helped form the collection
of Asian antiquities and textiles of the Musée Guimet in
Paris
Contemporary
artists put their mark on the sale as well. Shibu Natesans
Stand Alone, 2003, a composition based on the artists time
in Helsinki was bought for $198,000 more than doubling the pre-sale
estimate and establishing a new record for the artist. Subodh Gupta
sailed high winds with his painting Round the Corner, 2004 fetching
$90,000 and with his conceptual sculpture Gober/Ganesha realizing
$84,000.
Records
were set for Jagdish Swaminathan, Jogen Chowdhury, Arpita Singh,
Shibu Natesan, Bhupen Khakhar, Aisha Khalid, Nusra Latif Qureshi,
Avinash Chandra, Bikash Bhattacharjee, Jitish Kallat, Ahmed Shabbudin.
ABOUT
FRANCIS NEWTON SOUZA
Francis
Newton Souza the founder of the Progressive Artist's Group in 1947
is 'best known for his inventive human forms particularly the heads.
Born in Goa in 1924 he was a student at the J.J. School of Art from
where he was expelled in 1942 for participating in the Quit India
Movement. He left for London in 1949 where after an initial period
of struggle his work began to have an impact. The Institute of Contemporary
Arts included his work in a group exhibition in 1954 to be followed
by a solo show at Gallery one in 1955. The publication of his autobiographical
piece 'Nirvana of a Maggot' in Encounter magazine that was then
edited by the poet Stephen Spender also won him recognition.
A series
of exhibition that followed did well and were reviewed by well-known
art critics like John Berger who noted that Souza "straddles
many traditions but serves none". Apart from his paintings
he proved to be very articulate and an ingenious writer as his book
"Words and Lines" published in London in 1959 revealed.
He was on his way to being recognized as an outstanding painter
when he left for the United States and settled in New York in 1967.
Souza participated in the Commonwealth Artists of Fame exhibition
in London in 1977 and has had several exhibitions including one
man shows in Paris in 1954 and 1960 and in Detroit in 1968. His
retrospectives were held in New Delhi and Mumbai in 1987 and a show
at the Indus Gallery in Karachi in 1988. A large retrospective was
once again held in New Delhi in 1996.
As
a strong mode mist Souza's early work made an impact both in India
and abroad. His strong, bold lines delineated the head in a distinctive
way where it was virtually re-invented the circles, hatchings and
crosses.
Francis
Newton Souza died at the age of 77 on Thursday 28 March 2002 in
Bombay.
ABOUT
CHRISTIE'S
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is the world's leading auction house, a name and place that speaks
of extraordinary art, unparalleled service, and international glamour.
Founded in 1766 by James Christie, Christie's conducted the greatest
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a popular showcase for the unique and the beautiful. Christies
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