RAMESHWAR BROOTA (B. 1941)
PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION 
RAMESHWAR BROOTA (B. 1941)

Unidentified Soldier

Details
RAMESHWAR BROOTA (B. 1941)
Unidentified Soldier
signed, dated and titled 'R. Broota 90 "UNIDENTIFIED SOLDIER"' (on the reverse)
oil on canvas scraped with blade
22 x 24 7/8 in. (55.9 x 63.2 cm.)
Executed in 1990
Provenance
Sotheby's London, 24 May 2007, lot 118

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Lot Essay

"I just took the canvas, stood before the large mirror without clothes, started just doing scratching, scraping with it, and then from morning till evening, I continuously painted... because that had to be finished when it's wet... I was dreaming throughout the night, it was such a tortuous night... as if I was scraping my own body with the knife... to reveal this thing..." (Artist statement, Midnight to the Boom, Peabody Essex Museum, New York, 2013, p. 138)

Broota's anguish at the surrounding suffering he saw in society is forcefully expressed in his art both through deliberate technique and subject matter. Broota's imagery shifted from the Gorilla Man to the Primordial Man to the existential Man series, exploring an almost Darwinian study through the ages, charting the struggle for survival. Unidentified Soldier depicts a dehumanized figure in the vestments of war, corroded by conflict. This eerily ephemeral combatant visceral and menacing suffers in silence. Broota's archetypal tendrils contort in agony as they reach out to this anonymous soldier. This figure becomes a monument of mourning, a manifestation of the masculinity and the melancholy that war's destruction brings upon mankind.

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