Posts Tagged ‘old masters’

24
Jan

Top 10 artists for the next decade

   Posted by: admin    in About Us

Top 10 artists for the next decade

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MF Husain

The Indian master is unparalleled in his artistic depth, breadth and output. Husain is where most collections begin and end. The decade ahead will only further cement his status as an artistic leader in India and an ambassador for Indian art throughout the world.

FN Souza (1924-2002)

As the founder of the Progressive Artist Group, Souza was the intellectual fount that brought diverse artists ranging from Husain to Raza together to create a new vanguard for Indian art. The artist and his works are very much the embodiment of passion, as alternately a bon vivant or an enfant terrible, who was obsessed with women, nature and religion. There is so much still left to discover about Souza whose operatic life could influence future artists and writers for generations.

VS Gaitonde (1924-2001)

With so few works readily available from a lifetime of solitary painting endeavour, Gaitonde may not be as well known as his contemporaries but amongst the cognoscenti, he is considered a sublime master whose style cannot be replicated. There is no one else that has the ability to render fire, air and mist from ether into two dimensions. While I would be curious to analyse his work scientifically to see what gives his painting its characteristic luminescent glow, I also very much enjoy the simple pleasures of sitting in front of my work in quiet contemplation.

Manjit Bawa

He may be better known for his charming works that juxtapose bold colour planes with whimsical figures and animals that continue to grow in popularity but there is another side of Bawa’s works that appeal to me. He is capable of extremely fine draughtsmanship and powerful imagery that has a socio-political bent. Though under the radar at the moment, more attention is being paid to his entire body of work following his recent passing.

Atul Dodiya

He is one of the most talented, perfectionist and intellectual painters of our time. He bridges the generations from the Progressives to the youngest artists coming out of art school today, the latter of whom owe him a stylistic debt as one of the first artists bring a post-modern aesthetic into Indian art. While his style is mercurial, his works always surprise. Atul Dodiya will grow in greater esteem as the decade continues.

Tyeb Mehta

I envision that within the next decade the curatorial and collecting demand for Tyeb Mehta’s work will increase exponentially now that he has unfortunately passed on. His meticulously rendered paintings are homages to the downtrodden of our society. In contrast to these works, with his series of Hindu goddesses, he exhibits a deep understanding of classical Indian texts and philosophies that one does not see too often in current contemporary art practices.

Arpita Singh

Like the artist herself who maintains a demure façade, Arpita Singh’s works with their pastel candy colours look benign. But that is only until one sees more closely the strong subject matter and violent brushstrokes that give her works a raw intensity in an otherwise domestic or feminine scene. As a successful artist working in a male-dominated field, she inspires legions of followers and students for being a great painter in her own right.

Rameshwar Broota

One should say that Broota is almost sculptural in his highly individualised artistic technique of scraping layers and creating works by removing paint. Having a relatively small body of work will only makes his appeal stronger. In some of his early works which I have, I see humour and subversiveness in how he views society and its inequities. His recent works have philosophical underpinnings about nature, man, beast and universe that to me begin a visual dialogue about humankind and existence.

Jitish Kallat

As a young artist who has achieved much during a relatively short career, Jitish Kallat is extremely driven. I think many are drawn to his level of technical proficiency along with the urban themes that underlie his recent works. The sprawling city, its classes and underclasses in a jumbled explosion of line and colour are reflections of chaotic times in India where Jitish Kallat serves as a chronicler of the moment.

V Ramesh

A painters painter, V Ramesh’s works are rooted and he uses metaphorical allegory to emphasise the ides of importance of the Human Body. One of the art worlds’ better kept secrets!

For more Paintings on Old Master click on  this link

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17
Jan

Kartick Chandra Pyne

   Posted by: admin    in About Us

Graduating from Govt. College of Art & Craft, he went on to win Academy of Fine Arts Award in 1966,’69, ’73 and ’76 followed by Mahakoshal Kala Parishad Prize in ’73 and ’74. Pyne was one of the 100 artists chosen at ‘Hundred years of Asian Art’ (1861-1961), an exhibition organised by the Fukuoka Art Museum, Japan. But most of all it should also be known that he was one of the three painters who introduced surrealism in India. His works can be found at NGMA, New Delhi, Air India, Mumbai, Govt. of West Bengal Gallery, Birla Academy of Art and Culture and with several eminent private collectors in India, England, Italy, Japan, USA, Germany, UNESCO, Thailand and Singapore

Pyne is no stranger to struggle. Cousin of renowned painter Ganesh Pyne, his first watercolour sold for a paltry Rs 40 at a khola mela (open-air fair) in Kolkata in 1956. He finally found ‘fame’ only after his work Bird with Cage, painted and sold by Pyne in the 1970s for merely a couple of thousand rupees, fetched $10,200 (Rs 4.70 lakh) at a Sotheby’s auction in New York last September.

Now, the media considers him ‘arrived’. But Pyne refuses to be swept off his feet by the sudden interest from art dealers and gallery owners – he knows all too well how unpredictable life can be. And he says that he will never take it for granted again.

For more paintings on Old Masters and Famous Indian Paintings visit www.indianartideas.com200912080038070500386001260254287

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dataDec. 22 (Bloomberg) — A chalk drawing by the Renaissance painter Raphael that sold for $47.5 million topped auction sales in 2009, beating a Matisse still life of cowslips that made an artist record of $45.6 million.

Elsewhere, an Andy Warhol painting of dollar bills fetched $43.8 million, a Rembrandt portrait reached $32.9 million and an Art Deco chair owned by Yves Saint Laurent took $28 million (in dollar prices or equivalent at the time of the sale).

Collectors responded to the financial crisis by selecting the best 20th-century classics, Old Masters, wine and jewelry at international auctions. They shunned investment in some contemporary art as prices dropped by half and sales fell 75 percent. Private transactions increased as sellers at public auctions were no longer guaranteed minimum prices in 2009.

Here are some of the key moments of the year:

Feb. 5: Sotheby’s London sale tallied 17.9 million pounds (then $26.15 million), the lowest at its Part I contemporary auctions in the city since 2005. On Feb. 11, Christie’s International failed to sell Francis Bacon and Mark Rothkoworks that it expected would fetch as much as 5 million pounds and 3.5 million pounds.

Feb. 23-25: Christie’s raised 342.5 million euros (then $435.8 million) from the collection of the late fashion designer Saint Laurent and his partner Pierre Berge. The total was the highest at auction of a private art collection, and defied economic gloom, said dealers. It would have been higher had Cai Mingchao, the Chinese winning bidder on two Qing dynasty bronzes, not refused to pay his bill of 31.4 million euros.

The Matisse 1911 cowslips still life “Les coucous, tapis bleu et rose” made 35.9 million euros, paid in the room by the New York-based dealer Franck Giraud. Records were set for other modern artists Brancusi (29.2 million euros) and Mondrian (21.6 million euros), while the Eileen Gray airchair made 21.9 million euros, a record for any piece of 20th-century design and more than 10 times its low estimate.

April 30: An aluminum “Lockheed Lounge” chair by Marc Newson sold at Phillips de Pury & Co. in London for 1.1 million pounds, an auction record for contemporary design. Pieces by Zaha Hadid and Ron Arad failed to sell.

May 13: David Hockney’s portrait of philanthropist Betty Freeman fetched $7.9 million at Christie’s New York, setting an auction record for the 72-year-old artist.

Christie’s $93.7 million evening tally represented a 73 percent decline from May 2008. The previous evening, its rival Sotheby’s took $47 million, down 87 percent from the $362 million auction a year earlier when a single painting –Bacon’s 1976 triptych — fetched $86.3 million.

June 10: Dealers reported revived demand for contemporary works at the Art Basel fair in Switzerland. A diamond-encrusted sculpture by Takashi Murakamisold for $2 million at the VIP preview. While visiting the fair, Los Angeles-based collector Eli Broad said a decline in contemporary-art prices had “leveled out.”

July: The financier J. Ezra Merkin, sued by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo over his role as a provider of client funds to convicted money managerBernard Madoff, privately sold Rothko paintings and other artworks that had been frozen in the litigation for $310 million.

The Rothkos will go on view in Moscow’s Garage Center for Contemporary Culture, owned by billionaire Roman Abramovich’s partner Dasha Zhukova in spring 2010.

October: A new “Leonardo da Vinci” drawing was announced. A chalk, pen and ink drawing of a girl in profile, sold at auction for $19,000 in the late 1990s, was examined by the Montreal-based forensic expert, Peter Paul Biro, who found a fingerprint corresponding to one on Leonardo’s painting “St. Jerome.” It was valued at 100 million pounds by London-based dealer Simon Dickinson. Discreet approaches have been made to a number of prospective buyers by its owner, Paris-based trader Peter Silverman, said dealers. Silverman could not be contacted for comment.

Nov. 11: Warhol’s painting of 200 one-dollar bills fetched $43.8 million at Sotheby’s in New York. The seller, London- based collector Pauline Karpidas, paid $385,000 for the work in 1986. The 1962 silkscreen was temptingly estimated at $8 million to $12 million and topped contemporary-art auctions that marked a return of confidence among both sellers and buyers, said dealers.

November: Shanghai-based collector Liu Yiqian paid about 170 million yuan ($25 million) at Poly International Auction Co. in Beijing for a Ming Dynasty scroll by Wu Bin, a record for a Chinese painting. It was one of the high prices paid in 2009 by mainland buyers for pieces with Imperial connections.

Dec. 1: A ring with a 5-carat pink diamond sold for a record HK$83.5 million ($10.8 million) at Christie’s Hong Kong. During the sales, Christie’s sold HK$40 million of wine, including a 78-bottle lot of 1999 Domaine de la Romanee-Conti, which fetched HK$1.44 million.

Dec. 8: A drawing in black chalk by Raphael sold at Christie’s London for 29.2 million pounds, an auction record for any work of art on paper. The work had been entered by the heirs of the British collector Norman Colville, with a low estimate of 12 million pounds. It was bought on the telephone, dealers said, by the U.S.-based collector Leon Black, chief executive of Apollo Global Management LLC and a trustee of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

Earlier in the sale, Rembrandt’s 1658 canvas, “Portrait of a Man with Arms Akimbo,” sold for 20.2 million pounds to a telephone bidder later identified as Las Vegas casino developer Steve Wynn. The painting was sold by Johnson & Johnson heiress, Barbara Piasecka Johnson.

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