Lot Essay
Born in 1894 in erstwhile Bengal, now a part of Bangladesh, Hemendranath Mazumdar was one of the few Indian artists of the early twentieth century to achieve both academic and commercial success. Educated at the Jubilee Art School and the Government School of Arts in Kolkata, he gained a thorough understanding of the European academic style.
Although he was a close associate of Abanindranath Tagore, Mazumdar was never won over by the ideals of the Neo-Bengal School that Tagore founded. In a 1929 issue of the Illustrated Journal of Fine Arts, he wrote an article titled 'The Making of a Picture' in which he defined his working processes as typical of the prevailing academic technique favoured by the British: first producing preparatory sketches, then more detailed pencil and wash studies prior to the final, finely structured painting. Mazumdar's oeuvre then followed in the tradition of Raja Ravi Varma and explored a comparable range of themes centering mainly on idealising, sensual studies of the female form.
Despite being recognised for his skill in the genre of landscape painting, Mazumdar is best known for his oil paintings of women, usually bathing or draped in wet saris. His wife frequently sat for these portraits, explaining the similarities seen between many of the artist's subjects. These paintings combine elements of Western Classicism with Indian tradition. Sunflower exemplifies this style, featuring a beautiful woman depicted in an intimate field of flowers. Her bowed head, the soft light that falls across her body and the innocence that her white sari suggests, adds a sense of vulnerability to the painting.
During his lifetime Mazumdar was awarded many high profile commissions, including decorating a celebratory gate to welcome King George V of England to India in 1911, and being appointed the Court Artist of the Maharaja of Patiala (1932-38). Many of his works created during this period still hang in the courts of the palaces of several princely states such as Jodhpur and Bikaner.
Mazumdar's final great achievement was the design of a mural to accompany the All India Exhibition of 1948 in Calcutta, following Indian independence the year before. The mural depicted scenes from his childhood in Bengal, serving as testament to his talent and cementing his legacy after he passed away later that year.
Although he was a close associate of Abanindranath Tagore, Mazumdar was never won over by the ideals of the Neo-Bengal School that Tagore founded. In a 1929 issue of the Illustrated Journal of Fine Arts, he wrote an article titled 'The Making of a Picture' in which he defined his working processes as typical of the prevailing academic technique favoured by the British: first producing preparatory sketches, then more detailed pencil and wash studies prior to the final, finely structured painting. Mazumdar's oeuvre then followed in the tradition of Raja Ravi Varma and explored a comparable range of themes centering mainly on idealising, sensual studies of the female form.
Despite being recognised for his skill in the genre of landscape painting, Mazumdar is best known for his oil paintings of women, usually bathing or draped in wet saris. His wife frequently sat for these portraits, explaining the similarities seen between many of the artist's subjects. These paintings combine elements of Western Classicism with Indian tradition. Sunflower exemplifies this style, featuring a beautiful woman depicted in an intimate field of flowers. Her bowed head, the soft light that falls across her body and the innocence that her white sari suggests, adds a sense of vulnerability to the painting.
During his lifetime Mazumdar was awarded many high profile commissions, including decorating a celebratory gate to welcome King George V of England to India in 1911, and being appointed the Court Artist of the Maharaja of Patiala (1932-38). Many of his works created during this period still hang in the courts of the palaces of several princely states such as Jodhpur and Bikaner.
Mazumdar's final great achievement was the design of a mural to accompany the All India Exhibition of 1948 in Calcutta, following Indian independence the year before. The mural depicted scenes from his childhood in Bengal, serving as testament to his talent and cementing his legacy after he passed away later that year.