ZARINA (B. 1937)
PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION, LONDON
ZARINA (B. 1937)

By the Mango Tree

Details
ZARINA (B. 1937)
By the Mango Tree
signed, dated, titled and numbered '13/25 By the mango tree Zarina 88' (lower edge) each
etching on BFK paper
8 7/8 x 6 7/8 in. (22.5 x 17.5 cm.) each plate; 20 x 15 in. (50.8 x 38.1 cm.) each sheet
(3)Executed in 1988; number 13 from an edition of 25
3
Provenance
Gifted by the artist to the present owner

Brought to you by

Chiara de Nicolais
Chiara de Nicolais

Lot Essay

In this set of three prints, executed in 1988, Zarina memorialises the mango trees that used to grow outside her childhood home in Aligarh through abstract forms inspired by their leaves, fruit and seeds.

“The notion of home remains immensely important to Zarina at the same time that she is acutely aware of its impermanence and mutability. She speaks, therefore, of a need to create homes for herself that are as much psychic dwellings as actual physical locations in the world. Even as her travels have taken her to lands spanning the globe, Zarina’s gaze has often turned back to the childhood home in India that she was compelled to leave so long ago. Although the artist does not speak of her formative experience in terms of trauma, it might be said that this separation engendered a yearning to revisit this site of rupture and to try to recover and reconstitute, through acts of memory, what had been lost. With a repertoire of simple, abstract shapes that serve as mnemonic devices to trigger connections to her past, Zarina imaginatively returns to the site from which her journeys began, her father’s house at Aligarh.” (M. Machida, Unsettled Visions: Contemporary Asian American Artists and the Social Imaginary, Durham, 2009, p. 216)

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