List of paintings by Amrita Sher-Gil
This is a list of paintings by Hungarian-born Indian artist Amrita Sher-Gil (1913–1941).[1] Over 60 of her paintings, of which most were portraits and self-portraits, were created between 1930 and 1932 in Hungary and France.[2] 19 were self-portraits painted in Europe between 1930 and 1934, and two, including one in a blue sari, were later completed in India.[3] Several of her paintings were of nudes; some of herself and others based on models of which most were female.[4]
1929-1933
[edit]In her early years, Sher-Gil was a frequent vistor to Zebegény, in Hungary.[5] There she painted a church in 1932, and would several years later paint other views of the village including Winter and the Merry Cemetery.[5] The early 1930s were also the years she worked at the École des Beaux-Arts, Paris, painted mostly family and colleagues, and won awards at the annual competitions for portrait and still life for three years in a row.[6] In the summer of 1932, she submitted six paintings to the "end of year concours", Paris, for which she received second mention in her capacity as foreigner.[7] The six included Violins, Nude Self-Portrait with Palette, and Young Girls.[7] In her words, "my work in those days was absolutely Western in conception and execution except for the fact that it was never entirely tame or conventional".[6]
1933-1934
[edit]Sher-Gil later wrote that "towards the end of 1933 I began to be haunted by an intense longing to return to India, feeling in some strange inexplicable way that there lay my destiny as a painter".[6] She subsequently painted Self-Portrait as a Tahitian in early 1934, while still in Paris.[8][a]
Late 1934-1935
[edit]Sher-Gil returned to India in late 1934, with 60 of her oil paintings.[9] Then, she produced View from Majithia House, The Little Girl in Blue and Three Girls.[10] In September 1935, five of her 10 submitted paintings were shown at the 63rd annual Simla Fine Arts Exhibition, opened by Viceroy Lord Willingdon.[11] Those exhibited included Portrait of Father, Mother India, then known as Beggar Woman, Woman with Sunflower, then called Indian Peasant Woman, and Young Girls, then titled Conversation.[11] The Man in White, The Woman in Blue, The Model, Portrait of Malcolm Muggeridge, and a small landscape were rejected.[11] Feeling that they did not recognise the best of her work, she declined the Raja of Faridkot's prize the judges awarded her for Young Girls.[11]
1936
[edit]In March 1936, Sher-Gil won awards for two self-portraits at the fifth annual exhibition of the All-India Fine Arts Society, held at The Imperial, New Delhi.[12] Barada Ukil included 11 of Sher-Gil's works in his arts exhibition at The Cecil, Simla, held in September 1936.[13] These included Portrait of Mr. F. M. Khan, A Village Scene, Mother India, Composition, The Dreamer, and The Girl in Red.[13] In December 1936, Sher-Gil's work was displayed at the exhibition hall in the Public Gardens, Hyderabad.[14] There, the wealthy art collector, Nawab Salar Jung, showed interest in two paintings, was offered three, then declined to purchase any.[15]
1937
[edit]In October 1937, Sher-Gil painted her plein-air series, which included her first paintings with animals, one of which was The Story.[16] From 21 to 27 November that year, 33 of her works were displayed at her solo exhibition at Faletti's Hotel in Lahore, British India.[17] There, she revealed her first two Indian compositions, The Story and Siesta.[18] At Lahore, four paintings were sold in total; The Little Girl in Blue, The Story, Pink Self-portrait, and the Vina Player.[19] She wrote that "with the eternal significance of form and colour I interpret India and, principally, the life of the Indian poor on the plane that transcends the plane of mere sentimental interest".[6]
1938-1939
[edit]In 1938 five of Sher-Gil's paintings were exhibited at the All India Fine Arts and Crafts Society's exhibition in Delhi, and included Elephants Bathing in a Green Pool (1938), Composition (1936), and View from Studio (1934), which won the prize.[20] In the same year she married Viktor Egan in Hungary, and there painted Two Girls among others.[21] Returning to India in 1939, she moved to Saraya, Uttar Pradesh, and there her creations included Woman on Charpoy, Elephant Promenade, The Ancient Story Teller, and Haldi Grinders.[21][22] The dome of the family's estate features in the backgound of some of these, though she omits the Saraya Sugar Mills and its chimneys and smoke.[23]
1940s
[edit]In 1940, six of Sher-Gil's works were displayed at the Indian Academy of Fine Arts' Amritsar Exhibition (31 October – 10 November), to raise money for the War Fund.[22] These included Siesta, Sleep, Elephant Promenade, Elephants, The Swing, and the winning piece, The Ancient Story Teller.[22] Sher-Gil died at midnight on 5 December 1941, leaving The Last Unfinished Painting at Lahore.[21]
Legacy
[edit]By 1948, the Indian government had acquired 98 of Sher-Gil's paintings.[24] Following her father's death, several paintings of hers were saved by Hungarian-Indian social worker Fori Nehru.[25] The art restorer, Rupika Chawla, found several of Sher-Gil's paintings to have been altered by Sher-Gil herself.[26] These include Siesta, Woman Holding Fan, and Hillside.[26] In 1979 her works including Camels and Ancient Story Teller, were displayed at an exhibition in New delhi, organised by the Budapest Kunsthalle.[9]
Under India's Antiquities and Art Treasures Act (1972), formed in accordance with the UNESCO 1970 Convention to regulate the internal and external dealing in antiquities in India, the Archaeological Survey of India in 1976 and 1979, named Sher-Gil's works as Indian treasure that if sold in India, cannot leave the country.[27] Of the at least 143 listed paintings created by Sher-Gil, most are held by her relatives, and 44 of the 45 paintings that belonged to Viktor Egan and some paintings that were with her father, were donated to the National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi.[26]
Paintings (1930)
[edit]Image | Title | Collection | Dimensions Technique |
Notes Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1930: Self-Portrait 6 |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 58 × 79 cm Oil on canvas[28] |
Painted in Paris.[28] | |
1930: Amrita Sher-Gil Self-Portrait 7[28] |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 47.4 × 70.2 cm Oil on canvas[28] |
Painted in Paris[28]
Depicts Sher-Gil with a shoulderless dress and loose hair.[29][30] | |
1930: Self-Portrait 8 |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 53 × 82.5 cm Oil on canvas[28] |
Painted in Paris.[28] | |
1930: Self-Portrait 9 |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 49 × 65.5 cm Oil on canvas[28] |
Painted in Paris.[28] | |
1930: Seated Nude in Profile |
Whereabouts unknown[1] | Painted in Paris.[1] | ||
1930: Old Man with Beard |
Whereabouts unknown[31] | Painted at La Baule, France[31] | ||
1930: Brown Girl |
Whereabouts unknown.[1] | Painted in Paris.[1] | ||
1930: Male Torso |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 62 × 94 cm Oil on canvas[1] |
Her only male nude, originally titled Back Study[9] | |
1930: Sitting Nude |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 66 × 91.5 cm Oil on canvas[1] |
Painted in Paris.[1] | |
1930: Young Girl in Profile |
Whereabouts unknown[1] | Painted in Paris.[1] | ||
1930: Portrait of Mother |
Private collection.[32] | 49 × 65 cm Oil on canvas[28] |
Completed in Paris.[32] | |
1930: Portrait of My Sister |
Private collection[28] | 55.8 × 78.7 cm Oil on canvas[28] |
Painted in Paris.[32] | |
1930: Self-Portrait with Easel |
Private Collection[32] | 82.5× 90.5 cm Oil on canvas[32] |
Painted in Paris, it depicts a three-quarter Sher-Gil draped in red, in front of an easel.[8] | |
1930: Self-Portrait with Red Background |
Private collection[28] | 57 × 90 cm Oil on canvas[28] |
Painted in Paris.[33] | |
1930: Portrait[9] |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 61.5 × 74.3 cm Oil on canvas[34] |
One of the earliest portraits Sher-Gil completed of Boris Taslitzky in Paris.[35][9]
It won a prize in 1931, at the École des Beaux-Arts, Paris.[9] Also known as Portrait of a Young Man.[34] | |
1930: Boris Taslitzky |
One of several portraits Sher-Gil completed of Boris Taslitzky in Paris. | |||
1930: Madam Taslitsky |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 54 × 79 cm Oil on canvas[34] |
Portrait of Boris's mother, painted in Paris.[35]
Mme Taslitsky later died in a concentration camp.[35] |
Paintings (1931)
[edit]Image | Title | Collection | Dimensions Technique |
Notes Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1931: Self-Portrait 1 |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[32] | 48 × 58.5 cm Oil on canvas[32] |
Painted in Paris.[32] | |
1931: Self-Portrait 2 |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[32] | 44.5 × 59.5 cm Oil on canvas[32] |
Painted in Paris.[32] | |
1931: Self-Portrait 3 |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[32] | 47.6 × 62.3 cm Oil on canvas[32] |
Painted in Paris.[32] | |
1931: Self-Portrait 4 |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[32] | 48 × 63.5 cm Oil on canvas[32] |
Painted in Paris.[32] | |
1931: Self-Portrait with Red Flower |
Evelyn Taslitzky's collection, Paris.[28] | 42 × 56 cm Oil on canvas[28] |
Painted in Paris.[28] | |
1931: Woman's Back |
Exhibited at the Salon of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, Paris, 1932.[9]
Later known as Torso.[9] | |||
1931: Yusuf Ali Khan |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 45 × 53 cm Oil on canvas[34] |
At the encouragement of her mother, Sher-Gil was briefly engaged to aristocrat Yusuf Ali Khan, and painted his portrait in Paris.[36] | |
1931: Amrita Sher-Gil Self-Portrait |
Private collection. | 65.1 × 54 cm Oil on canvas |
Completed in Paris. In 2015 it was sold for £1.7 million at auction in London.[37][b] | |
1931: Victor Egan |
Painted in Hungary.[38]
Egan refers to this portrait as "a stupid picture of me".[38] | |||
1931: Alfred Cortot |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 44 × 30 cm Pastel on paper |
Depicts Alfred Cortot[39] | |
1931: Portrait of a Young Woman |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 32 × 42.5 cm Oil on canvas[40] |
Painted in Paris.[40] | |
1931: Violins |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 59 × 82 cm Oil on canvas[40] |
Painted in Paris.[40]
One of six paintings submitted to the "end of year concours" in summer 1932.[7] | |
1931: Woman in Blue Coat |
Private collection[32] | 48 × 66 cm Oil on canvas[32] |
Painted in Paris.[32] | |
1931: Girl in Mauve |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[32] | 36 × 53.7 cm Oil on canvas[32] |
Painted in Paris.[32] | |
1931: Village Scene in Hungary |
Private collection.[31] | 42 × 63 cm Oil on canvas[31] |
Painted in Hungary.[31] | |
1931: Dressing Table |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[40] | 75.5 × 62 cm Oil on canvas[40] |
Painted in Paris.[40] |
Paintings (1932)
[edit]Image | Title | Collection | Dimensions Technique |
Notes Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Portait of a Parisian Lady | |||||
1932: Torso |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 62 × 83 cm Oil on canvas |
Painted in Paris.[42] | ||
1932: Self-Portrait 5 |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[32] | 43 × 54.5 cm Oil on canvas[32] |
Painted in Paris.[32] | ||
1932: Adam and Eve |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 38.7 × 52.1 cm Oil on canvas[31] |
|||
1932: Still Life with Green Bottles and Apples |
Private collection[40] | 37 × 54.5 cm Oil on canvas[40] |
Painted in Paris.[40] | ||
1932: Nude Self-Portrait with Palette |
Whereabouts unknown[7] | Possibly "my nude" that Sher-Gil submitted to the "end of year concours" in summer 1932.[7] | |||
1932: Self-Portrait in Green Dress |
Private collection[28] | 51 × 60.5 cm Oil on canvas[28] |
Completed in Paris.[43] | ||
1932: Self-Portrait in Green |
Private collection[32] | 64.8 × 90 cm Oil on canvas[32] |
Completed in Paris around June 1932, and described by Sher-Gil as "a very good self-portrait".[4] | ||
1932: Department Store |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 49.5 × 62 cm Oil on canvas[31] |
Likely the store called Printemps that she took a sketch of in June 1932.[44] | ||
1932: The Blue Danube |
Whereabouts unknown[31] | Painted in Hungary.[31] | |||
1932: Hungarian Gypsy Girl |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 81.3 × 52.7 cm Oil on canvas[31] |
One of two paintings of the same girl who posed for Sher-Gil in old clothes, completed in the summer of 1932 in Zebegény.[7]
Ella Szepessy, Sher-Gil's maternal aunt, lived in a villa on the Zebegény hillside.[9] | ||
1932: Gypsy Girl from Zebegény |
Private collection[34] | 41 × 62 cm Oil on canvas[34] |
One of two paintings of the same girl who posed for Sher-Gil in old clothes, completed in the summer of 1932 in Zebegény.[7]
In green and red, it depicts a gypsy girl holding a basket of fruit.[9] | ||
1932: Girls in conversation |
Private collection[34] | 82 × 53 cm Oil on canvas[34] |
On 2 August 1932, after completing the Gypsy Girls, Sher-Gil began a large painting of two poor girls in Zebegény.[7] | ||
1932: Two Children on a Hillside |
Sher-Gil wrote to her parents in the summer of 1934 requesting they sell "the two little girls I painted in Zebegény, which I hate".[45]
A smaller version: In January 1937, she mentions selling a "picture of the two children on a hillside I had painted in Zebegény", at the Hyderabad exhibition for ₹250 in December 1936.[46] She called it the "small rotten painting", mostly kept rolled up.[46] | ||||
1932: Klarra Szepessy |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 53.5 × 99.5 cm Oil on canvas[34] |
Portrait of Sher-Gil's mother's younger sister.[47] | ||
1932: Hungarian Village Church |
Private collection.[31] | 54.5 × 81.2 cm Oil on canvas[31] |
Painted in Zebegény, Hungary.[5] | ||
1932: Denise Prouteaux |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[34] | 57 × 81 cm Oil on canvas[34] |
Painted in Paris.[34] | ||
1932: Portrait of Denise Prouteaux |
Private collection | [48] | |||
1932: Young Man with Apples |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 71 × 97 cm Oil on canvas[34] |
One of several portraits Sher-Gil completed of Boris Taslitzky,[35] this was exhibited at the XII Salon des Tuileries in 1934.[49][50]
Number 25 of 33 of Sher-Gil's works displayed at her solo exhibition at Faletti's Hotel in Lahore, British India, held from 21 to 27 November 1937.[17] There, it was priced at ₹500.[17] | ||
1932: Notre Dame |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 59.5 × 81 cm Oil on canvas[31] |
This was being created in June 1932, in Paris.[7] | ||
1932: Young Girls |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 133 × 164 cm Oil on canvas[31] |
Painted in June 1932.[10]
One of six paintings submitted to the "end of year concours" in summer 1932.[7] Earned Sher-Gil the appointment of associate member of the 1933 Paris Salon.[2] | ||
1932: Marie-Louise Chassanay |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 66.5 × 94.5 cm Oil on canvas[34] |
[51] | ||
1932: Sitting Nude |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 54 × 75 cm Oil on canvas[40] |
[7] | ||
1932: Potted Plant in Blossom |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[40] | 46 × 54 cm Oil on canvas[40] |
Painted in Paris.[40] | ||
1932: My Grandmother |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 46 × 63.5 cm Oil on canvas |
Portrait of Antonia Grottesmann née Martonfalvy (1864–1937), painted in Hungary.[38] | ||
1932: Viola Egan |
Private collection[34] | Painted in Hungary[34] | |||
1932: Gypsy Woman wearing Shawl |
Private collection of Istvan Szekely.[31] | 33 × 42 cm Oil on canvas |
Painted in Hungary.[31] | ||
Boat |
Paintings (1933)
[edit]Image | Title | Collection | Dimensions Technique |
Notes Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1933: Self-Portrait with a Smile |
Private collection[28] | 45.8 × 33.2 cm Oil on canvas[52] |
Painted in Hungary.[28][c] | |
1933: Reclining Nude |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 70.7 × 93.5 cm Oil on canvas[54] |
Completed in Budapest, it depicts Sher-Gil's cousin Viola, sister of her husband Victor Egan.[55][56] | |
1933: Open Air Painters |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 53 × 84 cm Oil on canvas[54] |
Completed in Paris.[54] | |
1933: The Girl in Black |
Whereabouts unknown[54] | Painted in Paris.[54]
Exhibited at the Salon of the Societe Nationale in 1934.[9] This was cut out of a large unfinished painting depicting Sher-Gil, Indira, Denise Prouteaux, and a nude model, and gifted to Denise.[57] According to Prouteaux, she left the painting in a warehouse in Grenoble, shortly after the German occupation of Paris.[57] When she returned after the war, it was missing.[57] It had been taken by a German officer to Germany.[57][55] | ||
1933: Spanish Girl |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 59 × 91.5 cm Oil on canvas[54] |
Completed in Paris.[54] | |
1933: Sleep |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 112.5 × 79.1 cm Oil on canvas[54] |
Painted in Paris 1932–1933, it depicts Sher-Gil's sister Indira.[7][58]
Displayed at the 1937 exhibition in Lahore for a price of ₹1,000, but did not sell.[17] It was later left with the Indian National Congressman and her friend Diwan Chaman Lall "to see if he could palm it off on someone but he wasn't successful".[59] | |
1933: Professional Model |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 72× 100 cm Oil on canvas[54] |
Created in 1933 in Paris and depicts a nude consumptive. Its vernissage took place in February 1933.[60]
Displayed at the 1937 exhibition in Lahore.[17] |
Paintings (1934)
[edit]Image | Title | Collection | Dimensions Technique |
Notes Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1934: Model in Green |
Created in 1934 in Paris and modelled on the same nude as in Professional Model.[61] | |||
1934: Self-portrait with long hair |
Private collection[54] | 35.5× 45.7 cm Oil on canvas[54] |
Painted in Paris[54] | |
1934: Model in Brown |
Created in 1934 in Paris and modelled on the same nude as in Professional Model.[61] | |||
1934: View from Studio |
Private collection[54] | 42 × 45.6 cm Oil on canvas[54] |
Probably completed from her studio at the corner of the Rue de la Grande-Chaumière, in the Rue Notre-Dame-des-Champs.[9]
In 1938, at the All India Fine Arts and Crafts Society's exhibition in Delhi, it was awarded best picture in oils and gold medal for best picture by a female artist.[20] In Sher-Gil's opinion it was the "weakest" of the five paintings she submitted.[20] | |
1934: Self-Portrait as a Tahitian |
Delhi, Kiran Nadar Museum of Art | 90 × 56 cm Oil on canvas |
[62] | |
Boat | Landscape, painted in the summer of 1934, Veroce, Hungary, where her maternal aunt Blanca lived.[9] | |||
Vine | Landscape, painted in Veroce.[9] | |||
1934: The Little Girl in Blue |
India, private collection | 48 × 40.6 cm Oil on canvas[63] |
One of Sher-Gil's earliest paintings upon returning to India in 1934.[64] It depicts a young Babette Mann.[65]
Displayed at the 1937 exhibition in Lahore, with a sale price of ₹150, and bought by Charles Fabri.[17] Sold by auction in 2018 for ₹18.69 crore, equivalent to $2.67 million.[30][66] | |
1934: View from Majithia House |
Payal and Rajiv Chaudhri, New York[67] | 33× 23 cm Oil on canvas[67] |
Painted in December 1934[63] |
Paintings (1935)
[edit]Image | Title | Collection | Dimensions Technique |
Notes Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1935: Group of Young Girls |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 92.8 × 66.5 cm Oil on canvas[67] |
Completed on 1 January 1935.[10]
Sher-Gil wrote to her mother on 1 January 1935 "Today I finished the painting of Mahindra's three daughters. It is excellent".[68] Also called Group of Young Girls, it was displayed at the 1937 exhibition in Lahore for a price of ₹700.[17][69] | |
1935: Woman on Terrace |
Private collection[67] | 73.6 × 99 cm Oil on canvas[67] |
Painted in February 1935 at Majithia House, Amritsar, and modelled on Mohindra's maid, Guro.[70]
Displayed at the 1937 exhibition in Lahore for a price of ₹500.[17] | |
1935: Beggars |
Private collection[63] | 59 × 84 cm Oil on canvas[63] |
Painted in early 1935 at Simla.[71] | |
1935: Woman with Sunflower |
Formerly called Indian Peasant Woman.[11][71] | |||
1935: Woman with Fan |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 59 × 82.5 cm Oil on canvas[67] |
Painted in July 1935 at Mashobra, Simla, modelled on Prakash, Umrao Singh's daughter by his first marriage.[72]
Sher-Gil possibly later made alterations to the face.[26] | |
1935: Boys with Lemons |
Private collection[67] | 56 × 90 cm Oil on canvas[67] |
Painted at Simla.[67] | |
1935: Mother India |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 62 × 78 cm Oil on canvas |
Painted in May/June 1935 at Simla.[10][73]
Formerly titled Beggar Woman.[11] Displayed at both the 1936 exhibition at the Cecil, and the 1937 exhibition in Lahore for a price of ₹500.[17][13] Possibly reminiscent of the poor man in Picasso's Blue Period.[9] | |
1935: Portrait of Malcolm Muggeridge |
Sikander Rahim (son of Esther Rahim), Pakistan[63] | Sher-Gil met Muggeridge in May 1935 and last saw him in September that year.[64] | ||
1935: Malcolm Muggeridge |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[63] | 59.5 × 94 cm Oil on canvas |
Painted at Simla in June 1935.[10][63]
His hand is larger than his face.[64] | |
1935: Portrait of Father |
60 × 91.5 cm Oil on canvas[63] |
Painted in May/June 1935 at Simla.[10][73]
Displayed at the 1937 exhibition in Lahore for a price of ₹500.[17] | ||
1935: Man in White |
Painted at Simla and modelled on student philosopher from Delhi, Prem Chand (1911–1995).[9][73]
Displayed at the 1937 exhibition in Lahore for a price of ₹350.[17] There, she was offered ₹250 for it.[19] | |||
Portrait of Mr. F. M. Khan | Hamid Haroon, Pakistan[64] | In green, blue and grey, he is posed on a stool.[64]
Gifted to publisher of Dawn, Haroon in the 1990s by Khan's widow.[64][74] | ||
1935: Nude Group |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 81.3 × 114.3 cm Oil on canvas[67] |
In the foreground is Sumair Kaur.[75] | |
1935: Two Women |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 74 × 100 cm Oil on canvas[67] |
Painted at Saraya.[67] | |
1935: Two Women in White |
Private collection.[63] | 35 × 24 cm Oil on canvas[63] |
Painted at Simla.[63][76] | |
1935: Hill Men |
89× 148.5 cm Oil on canvas[63] |
Painted in 1935 at Simla.[63][d] | ||
1935: Hill Women |
Private collection of Vivan Sundaram and Navina Sundaram, Delhi | 89 × 147.3 cm Oil on canvas[63] |
Painted in 1935 after Hill Men, at Simla.[63]
Depicts three young women and a girl.[8] Exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1936 and then at Hyderabad for a price of ₹2,500, where it was admired by Sarojini Naidu, who tried to persuade the Museum of Hyderabad to acquire the painting.[46] Displayed at the 1937 exhibition in Lahore for a price of ₹1,500.[17] |
Paintings (1936)
[edit]Image | Title | Collection | Dimensions Technique |
Notes Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1936: Raja Surat Singh |
Private collection[79] | 48.5 × 74 cm Oil on canvas[79] |
Painted in February 1936 at Saraya.[79] | |
1936: The Little Untouchable |
Whereabouts unknown[79] | Painted in March 1936 at Saraya.[13] | ||
1936: Portrait of Girl with Flower |
Private collection[79] | 30 × 40 cm Oil on canvas[79] |
Painted in March 1936 at Saraya.[79] | |
1936: Child Wife |
Private collection[79] | 53 × 76 cm Oil on canvas[79] |
Painted in March 1936 at Saraya.[79]
Also known as Child Bride.[13] Was planned to be shown at the Lahore exhibition in November 1937, but Sher-Gil changed her mind.[80] | |
1936: Sunder Singh |
Private collection[79] | 50.8 × 64.7 cm Oil on canvas[79] |
Painted in March 1936 at Saraya[79] | |
1936: Portrait of Joji |
Private collection[79] | 64.7 × 92.7 cm Oil on canvas[79] |
Painted in March 1936 at Saraya[79]
Depicts Joji, Jagjeevan/Gurjeevan (1913–2005), daughter of Kirpal Singh Majithia, and sister of Dalip Singh Majithia.[81] Sher-Gil wrote to her mother on 10 February 1936 that "I shall grudgingly paint her to her advantage so that she likes her image, and maybe she will purchase my painting".[81] | |
1936: Sumair |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 54 × 89 cm Oil on canvas[82] |
Portrait of Sumair Kaur, daughter of Umrao Singh's first son, Balram. Painted at Saraya.[75][e] | |
1936: Portrait of Sister |
Private[79] | 62 × 92.7 cm Oil on canvas[79] |
Painted at Simla.[79] | |
1936: Woman in Red |
Seeta Badrinath, Chennai[79] | 53 × 89 cm Oil on canvas[79] |
Painted at Simla.[79][83] | |
1936: Composition[13] |
Private collection[79] | 68.5 × 91.4 cm Oil on canvas[79] |
Considered by herself as one of her best at the time.[84] It was titled "Water Carriers" when exhibited at the Salon.[85]
Depicts a water jar in front of a child and a coolie.[86] Painted in Simla and sold in November 1936 at Sher-Gil's exhibition at the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel Mumbai for ₹1,000 to Anand Prabha Shankar Pattani, son of Prabhashankar Pattani.[86] It was one of five of her paintings exhibited at the All India Fine Arts and Crafts Society's exhibition in Delhi in 1938.[20] |
Paintings (1937)
[edit]Image | Title | Collection | Dimensions Technique |
Notes Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1937: Fruit Vendors |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 73.6 × 105.5 cm Oil on canvas[82] |
Painted in January 1937 at Cape Comorin.[82]
Displayed at the 1937 exhibition in Lahore for a price of ₹250.[17] | |
1937: The Vina Player |
Lahore Museum, Lahore, Pakistan[87] | Displayed at the Lahore exhibition (1937), where it was bought for the museum.[17] | ||
1937: Raja of Kollengode |
Siddarth John, Thiruvananthapuram.[82] | 77.5× 116 cm Oil on canvas[82] |
Painted at Simla in March 1937, a "portrait to order", her mother described it as "an ancient pope propped up in his chair to receive the final unction".[88] | |
1937: Girl with Pitcher |
Whereabouts unknown[82] | 68 × 105.4 cm Oil on canvas[82] |
Completed in Simla in April 1937, she told Karl that this painting was a success for her: "two dark figures, burnt sienna against a luminous white background".[88] | |
1937: Bride's Toilet[3] |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 144.5 × 86 cm Oil on canvas[82] |
Completed in April 1937.[82]
One of Sher-Gil's South Indian trilogy.[89] Displayed at the Lahore exhibition (1937) for a price of ₹1,500.[17] | |
1937: Brahmacharis |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 144.5 × 86.5 cm Oil on canvas[87] |
Painted in May 1937 at Simla.[87]
One of Sher-Gil's South Indian trilogy.[89] Displayed at the Lahore exhibition (1937) for a price of ₹1,500.[17] | |
1937: Village Girl |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 56 × 90 cm Oil on canvas[82] |
||
1937: Namaskar |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 38 × 48.7 cm Oil on canvas[82] |
Painted at Simla.[82] | |
1937: South Indian Villagers going to Market |
90 × 147.3 cm Oil on canvas[87] |
Painted at Sher-Gil's home, The Holme, Simla, around October 1937, along with the two smaller compositions The Story Teller and Siesta.[16][3]
Displayed at the 1937 exhibition in Lahore for a price of ₹1,500.[17] In 1940, the painting was one of six of Sher-Gil's works displayed at the Indian Academy of Fine Arts' Amritsar Exhibition (31 October – 10 November), to raise money for the War Fund.[22] | ||
1937: Self-Portrait |
Private collection[82] | 52 × 78 cm Oil on canvas[82] |
Completed in October 1937 at Simla.[82]
Possibly the painting Sher-Gil calls Pink Self-portrait, sold at the Lahore exhibition in November 1937.[19][90] | |
1937: Siesta |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[87] | 83 × 55 cm Oil on canvas[87] |
Painted in October 1937 at Simla.[87]
According to Vivan Sundaram it was originally titled Fantasy, and completed at Simla.[3] Displayed at the 1937 exhibition in Lahore for a price of ₹750.[17] Sher-Gil in a letter to Khandelwal dated 19 December 1937, wrote "my fantasy (which I have called Painting)",[91] and was priced at ₹350 at Lahore.[17] Sher-Gil possibly later made alterations to the painting.[26] In 1940, the painting was one of six of Sher-Gil's works displayed at the Indian Academy of Fine Arts' Amritsar Exhibition (31 October – 10 November), to raise money for the War Fund.[22] | |
1937: Dressing the Bride |
Private collection[82] | 70 × 95 cm Oil on canvas[82] |
Painted at Simla in November 1937.[82] | |
1937: Women on the Beach |
Government Museum and Art Gallery, Chandigarh[82] | 29.9 × 40 cm Oil on canvas[82] |
Painted at Cape Comorin.[82]
Modelled on South Indian women.[92] | |
1937: Villagers in Winter |
Oil on canvas |
One of Sher-Gil's South Indian trilogy.[89]
Displayed at the Lahore exhibition (1937) for a price of ₹1,500.[17] | ||
1937: Mendicant |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 36 × 52 cm Oil on canvas[87] |
Painted at Simla[87] | |
1937: Two Mendicants |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 66.5 × 89.5 cm Oil on canvas[87] |
Painted at Simla[87] | |
1937: Lady Daljit Singh of Kapurthala |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[82] | 55 × 89 cm Oil on canvas[82] |
Portrait of Rani Lady Daljit Singh of Kapurthala.[82] | |
1937: Self-Portrait |
Private collection.[82] | 52× 78 cm Oil on canvas[82] |
One of two self-portraits completed in Simla, Sher-Gil described this as "sugary".[3] | |
1937: Self-Portrait in Blue Sari |
Private collection[82] | 45× 79 cm Oil on canvas[82] |
One of two self-portraits completed in Simla.[3] | |
1937: Head of Girl |
Private collection[87] | 29 × 33 cm Oil on canvas[87] |
Painted at Simla.[87] | |
1937: Bullock Cart |
Private collection[87] | 41 × 30 cm Oil on canvas[87] |
Painted at Simla.[87] | |
1937: The Story Teller |
India, private collection | 59 × 79 cm Oil on canvas |
Sher-Gil's first painting with animals,[16] she described it as "a little composition with cows", and Karl noticed its Pahari characters.[19]
Bought by Badruddin Tyabji jr at the 1937 exhibition in Lahore, where it was put up for ₹250.[17] Sold at auction in 2023 for ₹61.8 crore ($2.67 million).[93] |
Paintings (1938)
[edit]Image | Title | Collection | Dimensions Technique |
Notes Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1938: Portrait of a Stout Lady |
Whereabouts unknown.[19] | One of two commissioned paintings, Sher-Gil called "nerve-wracking". Begun in Lahore in December 1937, and completed in January 1938. Sher-Gil described it as "a stout lady who squints outward and wants to be depicted slender and charming. How I hate it".[19][94] Left unsigned.[19] | ||
Portrait of Mrs Hirlalal | Though Sher-Gil typically charged ₹500 for each portrait of a head, two portraits were requested for Hirlalal, and she asked for ₹700 to do both.[19] | |||
1938: Portrait of Shakuntala Kapur |
National Art Gallery, Pakistan[94][f] | One of two commissioned paintings, Sher-Gil called "nerve-wracking", completed in early 1938 in Lahore, it depicts Shakuntala Lall, who asked Sher-Gil to adjust her "ugly" fingers to appear slender.[94] Sher-Gil did as requested and left the painting unsigned.[95]
In the 1950s it was found in a rag shop in Lahore and acquired for free by Ashfaq Ahmed.[94] Ahmed was charged ₹3 for the frame and offered the picture for nothing. He walked away with the painting, leaving the frame behind.[94] At the request of artist Zubeida Agha, he gave it to the National Art Gallery, Islamabad.[94] | ||
1938: Portrait of Helen |
Whereabouts unknown[87] | 26.5 × 35 cm Oil on canvas[87] |
In January 1938 from Faletti's, Sher-Gil painted Helen Chaman Lall, and wrote to her parents "I have started on a head of Mrs. Chaman Lall for which I don't wish to charge them anything".[96][94] | |
1938: Red Brick House |
Private[97] | 37 × 26.6 cm Oil on canvas[97] |
Completed in Lahore in January 1938.[97]
Depicts a bakery called Thompson's and was given to N. Iqbal Singh.[94] In July 2006, it was sold at Osian's for ₹ 1.3 crore.[98] | |
1938: Elephants Bathing in a Green Pool |
81 × 56 cm Oil on canvas[97] |
Completed in Saraya in February 1938.[10]
It was one of five of her paintings exhibited at the All India Fine Arts and Crafts Society's exhibition in Delhi in 1938.[20] | ||
1938: Village Group |
Private collection[97] | 95 × 66 cm Oil on canvas[97] |
Painted in March 1938 at Saraya.[97] | |
1938: Women in Red |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 59.5 × 53.7 cm Oil on canvas[97] |
Painted in March 1938 at Saraya.[97] | |
1938: Three Bullock Carts |
Private collection[97] | 78.7 × 40.6 cm Oil on canvas[97] |
Completed in Saraya in March 1938.[97] | |
1938: Hill Scene |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[97] | 65 × 87.5 cm Oil on canvas[97] |
Completed in Simla in April 1938.[97] | |
1938: Hill Side |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 65 × 87.5 cm Oil on canvas[97] |
Completed in Simla in June 1938.[97] | |
1938: Village Scene[99] |
Indian businessman, Nand Khemka, private collection[100] | 84 × 62 cm Oil on canvas[97] |
Painted around February–March 1938,[10] in Simla.[97]
Sold at Osian's in March 2006 to Khemka for $1.6 million.[100][101] | |
1938: In the Ladies Enclosure |
Private collection[97][102] | 81 × 56 cm Oil on canvas[97] |
Painted in March 1938 at the family estate in Saraya, Gorakhpur.[97][102]
Depicts a group of women, including members of the Majithia family, and a dog.[102][103] Sold at auction in 2021 for ₹ 37.8 crore.[103] | |
1938: Red Clay Elephant |
Vivan and Navina Sundaram collection, New Delhi.[97] | 66 × 96.5 cm Oil on canvas[97] |
Completed in March 1938 at Saraya.[97]
Formerly known as Ganesh Puja.[73] | |
1938: Red Verandah |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 71.6 × 144.2 cm Oil on canvas[97] |
Painted in May 1939 in Simla.[97] | |
1938: Sardarni Kirpal Singh Majithia |
Private collection[97] | 66 × 92.7 cm Oil on canvas[97] |
Painted in April 1938 in Saraya, Sher-Gil wrote to her mother in March 1938..."Kirpal has asked me to paint his wife from memory and the aid of a rotten photograph".[20][g] | |
1938: Potato Peeler |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 59.5 × 72.7 cm Oil on canvas[104] |
Completed in November 1938 in Hungary.[104] | |
1938: In the Garden |
75 × 60 cm Oil on canvas |
Private collection | Painted in Hungary and gifted to Viola Egan.[105] | |
1938: Hungarian Church Steeple |
Private collection[104] | 45.7 × 67.3 cm Oil on canvas[104] |
Painted in Kiskunhalas, Hungary, in November 1938, a few months after she returned there to marry Viktor Egan.[21][104] | |
1938: Hungarian Village Market |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[104] | 72 × 97 cm Oil on canvas[104] |
Painted in Kiskunhalas, Hungary, in November 1938.[21][104]
Best known artwork of hers from this trip to Hungary.[21] Depicts the white tower of Kiskunhalas church behind people dressed in black[9] | |
1938: Trees |
Zsuzsa Urbach, Budapest.[104] | 38.2 × 61 cm Oil on canvas[104] |
||
1938: Hungarian Peasant |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[104] | 38 × 53 cm Oil on canvas[104] |
Painted in Kiskunhalas in November 1938.[104] |
Paintings (1939)
[edit]Image | Title | Collection | Dimensions Technique |
Notes Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1939: Winter |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 73.6 × 52 cm Oil on canvas[104] |
Painted in Zebegény in January 1939[104] | |
1939: Merry Cemetery |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 73 × 98.5 cm Oil on canvas[104] |
Painted in Zebegény.[106] | |
1939: Portrait of Victor Egan |
Private collection of Manoj Israni (2022)[107] | 63.5× 80 cm Oil on canvas[104] |
Painted in Hungary.[104]
Portrays Egan in army uniform, and sold in 2020 to Manoj Israni for ₹10.86 crore.[107] | |
1939: Female Torso |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 56 × 99 cm Oil on canvas[104] |
Painted in Budapest.[104] | |
1939: Two Girls |
Vivan & Navina Sundaram[104] | 89 × 129 cm Oil on canvas[104] |
Painted in Budapest in March 1939,[62][104] the dark girl is modelled on a dark Hungarian gypsy.[1][108][109] | |
1940: Resting |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 99 × 110.7 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
Painted in November 1939 at Simla.[110] |
Paintings (1940)
[edit]Image | Title | Collection | Dimensions Technique |
Notes Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1940: Ancient Story Teller |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[110] | 70 × 87 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
Painted at Saraya in January 1940.[111]
The painting was one of six of Sher-Gil's works displayed at the Indian Academy of Fine Arts' Amritsar Exhibition (31 October – 10 November), to raise money for the War Fund.[22] There, it was awarded the Sardar S. G. Thakur Singh Award (₹50) for best composition in oil.[22] Displayed by the Budapest Kunsthalle at New Delhi, in 1979.[9] | |
1940: The swing |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[110] | 70 × 91.4 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
Completed in March 1940,[111] the painting was one of six of Sher-Gil's works displayed at the Indian Academy of Fine Arts' Amritsar Exhibition (31 October – 10 November), to raise money for the War Fund.[22]
The main figure is modelled on (Tejwant Kaur (Teji), daughter of Kirpal Singh Majithia, Sher-Gil's cousin.[112] | |
1940: Woman on Charpoy |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[110] | 85 × 72.4 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
Completed at Saraya in June 1940.[69][73][113][114]
The main figure is modelled on Teji.[112] | |
1940: Bride |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[110] | 70 × 98 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
Painted at Saraya[10][115] | |
1940: Resting Mother |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[110] | 97 × 72 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
Painted at Saraya.[110] | |
1940: Elephant Promenade |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[110] | 92.5 × 126.5 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
In 1940, the painting was one of six of Sher-Gil's works displayed at the Indian Academy of Fine Arts' Amritsar Exhibition (31 October – 10 November), to raise money for the War Fund.[22] | |
1940: Elephants |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[110] | 72 × 86.3 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
Painted in March 1940 in Saraya.[110]
In 1940, the painting was one of six of Sher-Gil's works displayed at the Indian Academy of Fine Arts' Amritsar Exhibition (31 October – 10 November), to raise money for the War Fund.[22] | |
1940: Two Elephants |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[110] | 43.2 × 52 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
Painted at Saraya.[110] | |
1940: Haldi Grinders |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[110] | 74.7 × 100 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
Painted at Saraya.[110] | |
1940: Musicians |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[110] | 67.5 × 93 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
Painted in December 1940.[110] | |
1940: Horse and Groom |
Unknown[110] | Painted at Saraya.[110] | ||
1940: Woman at Bath |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[110] | 70 × 92 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
Painted at Saraya.[110] |
Paintings (1941)
[edit]Image | Title | Collection | Dimensions Technique |
Notes Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1941: Village Girls |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art | 44.3 × 52.2 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
Painted at Saraya in August 1941.[117]
From Sardarnagar, Gorakhpur, Sher-Gil wrote to Badruddin Tyabji on 3 September 1941 that she had completed the Village Girls after at least six months of not looking at her brushes. "The spell has suddenly broken now and I am working with passion".[117] In Sher-Gil's words it depicts "four little girls weaving baskets. The background an acid lemon, the children a medley of hot colour."[117] | |
1941: Camels |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[110] | 74.7 × 100 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
Painted at Saraya in September 1941.[110]
Sher-Gil wrote to her mother on 29 August 1941 that "I am doing a lot of drawings of animals. Camels, horses, baffaloes etc.".[118] In Sher-Gil's words it depicts "a curious rose coloured Indian saddle on one of the animals".[117] Displayed by the Budapest Kunsthalle at New Delhi, in 1979.[9] | |
1941: The Last Unfinished Painting |
New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art[110] | 65.7× 87.5 cm Oil on canvas[110] |
Was being painted in early December 1941 at Lahore.[21]
Sher-Gil's intention was to paint what she could see from her terrace: the milkmen's buffaloes that lived near her home.[21] |
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ In Self-Portrait as a Tahitian " her tanned naked body is slightly turned, a possible reference to the artist's longing to return to India".[8]
- ^ Not mentioned in Sundaram's book
- ^ Sundaram notes this to have been completed in 1932, though Sotheby's point out that Sher-gil signed it dated 1933.[53][52]
- ^ Sundaram lists Hill Men as completed in December 1935, and Hill Women the previous month.[10] Others state that Hill Men was created first.[77][78]
- ^ Sumair (born 1918), became a model in Paris and was later associated with the underworld, Nazis and Axis agents. Bernard Wasserstein describes her as having "a podgy face and snub nose, and was somewhat short for a model".[75]
- ^ Sundaram states this painting's whereabouts is unknown.[87]
- ^ Kirpal Singh (1891–1944) was Sher-Gil's cousin, married to Raminder Kaur (1894–1936), also known as Sardarni Kirpal Singh Majithia[10]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Sundaram, pp. 796–811
- ^ a b Dalmia, pp. 31-32
- ^ a b c d e f Sundaram, pp. 416–417
- ^ a b Sundaram, pp. 72–79
- ^ a b c "Hungarian Village Church". www.christies.com. Christies. 2013. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
- ^ a b c d Sher-Gil, Amrita (2014). "1. Evolution of my art". In Dalmia, Yashodhara (ed.). Amrita Sher-Gil: Art & Life : a Reader. Oxford University Press. pp. 3–8. ISBN 978-0-19-809886-7.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Sundaram, pp. 80–85
- ^ a b c d Haupt, Christina (2016). Amrita Sher-Gil and the representations of non-western female bodies. Norderstedt: Grin. pp. 2–4. ISBN 978-3-6684-887-7-9.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Keserü, Katalin (2014). "8. Amrita Sher-Gil: the Indian painter and her French and Hungarian connections". In Dalmia, Yashodhara (ed.). Amrita Sher-Gil: Art & Life : a reader. Oxford University Press. pp. 65–126. ISBN 978-0-19-809886-7.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Sundaram, pp. vi–xliii
- ^ a b c d e f Sundaram, pp. 214–217
- ^ Sundaram, p. 234
- ^ a b c d e f Sundaram, pp. 246–247
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 266–270
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 271–285
- ^ a b c Dalmia, pp. 98–100
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Sundaram, pp. 422–424
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 418–421
- ^ a b c d e f g h Sundaram, pp. 430–431
- ^ a b c d e f Sundaram, pp. 471–473
- ^ a b c d e f g h Singh, N Iqbal (1975). "Amrita Sher-Gil". India International Centre Quarterly. 2 (3): 209–217. ISSN 0376-9771.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sundaram, pp. 684–685
- ^ Khanna, S. (2015). The Contemporary Novel and the City: Re-conceiving National and Narrative Form. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 132–134. ISBN 978-1-137-33624-8.
- ^ Banik, Pinak (1 January 2019). "Containing the Cosmetic Nation: Acquisition of Sass Brunner Paintings". Prabuddha: Journal of Social Equality.
- ^ Dalmia, p. 36
- ^ a b c d e Dalmia, pp. 204–205
- ^ The Protection of Movable Cultural Property: Compendium of Legislative Texts. Unesco. 1984. p. 167. ISBN 978-92-3-101638-7.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Sundaram, p. 798
- ^ Dalmia, p. 54
- ^ a b Shaw-Johnson, Amanda (2021). Why Now?: The Euro-U.S. Canon Adopts Tarsila do Amaral and Amrita Sher-Gil Almost 90 Years Later (Thesis). UC Davis.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Sundaram, p. 801
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Sundaram, p. 799
- ^ Sundaram, p. 78
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Sundaram, p. 800
- ^ a b c d Sundaram, pp. 98–99
- ^ Dalmia, pp. 34–35
- ^ Roy, Amit (2015). "Sold: Sher-Gil self-portrait for £1.7m". www.telegraphindia.com. Archived from the original on 25 November 2023. Retrieved 25 November 2023.
- ^ a b c Sundaram, pp. 60–61
- ^ "Alfred Cortot". www.museumsofindia.gov.in. Archived from the original on 12 January 2024. Retrieved 8 January 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Sundaram, p. 797
- ^ Sundaram, p. 166
- ^ Sundaram, p. 392
- ^ Sundaram, p.86
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 76–79
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 140–141
- ^ a b c Sundaram, pp. 278–285
- ^ Sundaram, p. 56
- ^ Jhala, Kabir (2 March 2021). "Rediscovered portrait by India's most famous female painter Amrita Sher-Gil expected to sell for $2.8m". The Art Newspaper – International art news and events. Archived from the original on 4 January 2024. Retrieved 23 December 2023.
- ^ Dalmia, pp. 39–42
- ^ Higgie, Jennifer (2021). The Mirror and the Palette: Rebellion, Revolution and Resilience: 500 Years of Women's Self-Portraits. Hachette. p. 190. ISBN 978-1-4746-1380-4.
- ^ Anand, Mulk Raj (1989). Amrita Sher-Gil. National Gallery of Modern Art. p. 10.
- ^ a b "(#1336) Amrita Sher-Gil". Sothebys.com. Retrieved 12 November 2024.
- ^ Sundaram, p. 102
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Sundaram, p. 802
- ^ a b Sundaram, Vivan; Sher-Gil, Umrao Singh (2001). Re-take of Amrita: Digital Photomontages Based on Photographs by Umrao Singh Sher-Gil (1870–1954) and Photographs from the Sher-Gil Family Archive. Tulika. p. 55. ISBN 978-81-85229-49-2.
- ^ Sundaram, p. 94
- ^ a b c d Sundaram, pp. 112–115
- ^ Singh, Nikky-Guninder Kaur (2011). "8. Sikh art". Sikhism: An Introduction. New York: Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 239–250. ISBN 978-1-84885-320-1.
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 522–523
- ^ Dalmia, p. 50
- ^ a b Dalmia, pp. 29–30
- ^ a b Bhushan, Nalini (2020). "19. Amrita Sher-Gil: identity and integrity as a mixed-race woman artist in colonial India". In Alston, Charlotte; Carpenter, Amber; Wiseman, Rachael (eds.). Portraits of Integrity: 26 Case Studies from History, Literature and Philosophy. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 195–206. ISBN 978-1-350-04039-7.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Sundaram, p. 804
- ^ a b c d e f Dalmia, pp. 59–75
- ^ "Amrita Sher-Gil Portrait Comes to Market After 80 Years". Sothebys.com. Sothebys. 26 November 2018. Retrieved 29 October 2024.
- ^ "Amrita Sher-Gil's 'The Little Girl in Blue' fetches Rs 18.69 crore". Tribune. 30 November 2018. Archived from the original on 12 November 2023. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Sundaram, p. 803
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 184–185
- ^ a b Mandakini; Gupta, Ila; Jha, P. (2016). "20. Gender and space in the paintings of Raja Ravi Varma and Amrita Sher-Gil". In Seta, Fumihiko; Biswas, Arindam; Khare, Ajay; Sen, Joy (eds.). Understanding Built Environment: Proceedings of the National Conference on Sustainable Built Environment 2015. Springer. pp. 237–254. ISBN 978-981-10-2136-7.
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 192–196
- ^ a b Dalmia, p.61
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 208, 334
- ^ a b c d e Sundaram, pp. 642–647
- ^ Wasim, Omer (5 November 2015). "Different strokes". Herald Magazine. Retrieved 28 January 2024.
- ^ a b c Sundaram, pp. 178–181, 202
- ^ Sundaram, p. 208
- ^ Dalmia, p. 73
- ^ Tillotson, G.H.R. (1997). "A Painter of Concern: Critical Writings on Amrita Sher-Gil". India International Centre Quarterly. 24 (4): 57–72. ISSN 0376-9771.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Sundaram, p. 805
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 412–413
- ^ a b Sundaram, p. 227-229
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Sundaram, p. 806
- ^ Sundaram, p. 247
- ^ Foulds, J. P. (7 November 1936). "Amrita Sher-Gil and Indian art: formulation of a new technique". Civil & Military Gazette. Lahore. p. 13.
- ^ Sundaram, p. 345
- ^ a b Sundaram, pp. 260–261
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Sundaram, p.807
- ^ a b Sundaram, pp. 362-363
- ^ a b c Dalmia, pp. 201–202
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 410-411
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 428–429
- ^ Dalmia, pp. 84, 90
- ^ "Amrita Sher-gil's 'The Story teller' is now the most expensive Indian painting! Oil on canvas masterpiece fetches Rs 61.8 cr at Delhi auction". The Economic Times. 19 September 2023. ISSN 0013-0389. Archived from the original on 26 September 2023. Retrieved 19 September 2023.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Dalmia, pp.103–104
- ^ Singh, N. Iqbal (1984). Amrita Sher-Gil: A Biography. Vikas. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-7069-2474-9.
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 438–439
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Sundaram, p. 808
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 454–455
- ^ Dalmia, Yashodhara (2014). "7. Transformation of the pre-modern to the modern in early twentieth-century Indian art". In Dalmia, Yashodhara (ed.). Amrita Sher-Gil: Art & Life : a reader. Oxford University Press. pp. 53–64. ISBN 978-0-19-809886-7.
- ^ a b Bethlenfalvy, Za (2011). "Amrita Sher-Gil: A Painter of Two Continents". The Hungarian Quarterly (201): 87–98. ISSN 0028-5390.
- ^ Sooke, Alastair (24 February 2007). "Laid bare – the free spirit of Indian art". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 17 December 2023. Retrieved 17 December 2023.
- ^ a b c Hodge, Susie (2024). "In the Ladies' Enclosure". Elements of Art: Ten Ways to Decode the Masterpieces. Frances Lincoln. p. 135. ISBN 978-0-7112-8665-8.
- ^ a b Tripathi, Sumedha (15 July 2021). "After Selling For Rs 37.8 Cr, Amrita Sher-Gil's Art Becomes The Second Most Expensive Indian Artwork". IndiaTimes. Retrieved 13 February 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Sundaram, p. 809
- ^ "Amrita Sher-Gil". Sothebys.com. Sotheby's. Archived from the original on 5 February 2024. Retrieved 5 February 2024.
- ^ Dalmia, p. 198
- ^ a b Gupta, Jahnavi (24 December 2020). "Amrita Sher-Gil's rare portrait fetches over Rs 10 crore". Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 1 January 2024. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 570–572
- ^ Dalmia, pp. 118–19
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al Sundaram, pp. 810-811
- ^ a b Dalmia, pp. 133-134
- ^ a b Sundaram, pp.498–499
- ^ Sen, Geeti (2002). Feminine fables : imaging the Indian woman in painting, photography,and cinema. Ahmedabad: Mapin Publishing. p. 63. ISBN 978-81-85822-88-4.
- ^ Dalmia, pp. 135, 149-150
- ^ Dalmia, p. 136
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 694–697
- ^ a b c d Sundaram, pp. 743–745
- ^ Sundaram, pp. 737–741
Bibliography
[edit]- Dalmia, Yashodhara (2013). Amrita Sher-Gil: A Life. Gurugram: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-342026-2.
- Sundaram, Vivan (2010). Amrita Sher-Gil: A Self-Portrait in Letters and Writings. Vol. 1. New Delhi: Tulika Books. pp. 1–417. ISBN 978-81-89487-59-1.
- Sundaram, Vivan (2010). Amrita Sher-Gil: A Self-Portrait in Letters and Writings. Vol. 2. New Delhi: Tulika Books. pp. 418–821. ISBN 978-81-89487-59-1.
External links
[edit]- "Amrita Sher-Gil (list of paintings held at the National Gallery of Modern Art, Delhi)". ngmaindia.gov.in. Archived from the original on 11 November 2023. Retrieved 11 November 2023.
- "Classical Indian Art -Dec-14, 2015 -Lot 45 –". Saffronart. Retrieved 23 December 2023.