SYED HAIDER RAZA (B. 1922)
PROPERTY OF A DISTINGUISHED COLLECTOR "I have interpreted the universe in terms of five primiary colours: black, white, red, blue, and yellow. A total cromatic expression can be achieved by mixing primary colours with other secondary colours, such as greens, browns, and ochers. From there you can move to a great austerity of colours till you come to a supreme purity of form." - S. H. Raza
SYED HAIDER RAZA (B. 1922)

Kundalini Pancha-Tatava

细节
SYED HAIDER RAZA (B. 1922)
Kundalini Pancha-Tatava
signed and dated 'RAZA 2001' (lower centre); further signed, dated, inscribed and titled 'RAZA 2001 120 x 120 cm "KUNDALINI" Pancha - tatva
acrylic on canvas
47¼ x 47¼ in. (120 x 120 cm.)
Painted in 2001
来源
Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner
出版
A. Vajpeyi, Raza, Paris, 2002, (illustrated, unpaginated)

拍品专文

Although nature has always been an integral part of Syed Haider Raza's work, it was only from the late 1970s that the artist's personal depiction of nature began to become more abstract and geometric. Returning to his Indian roots, Raza began to conceive of and express nature and its elements in terms of primary shapes and colours. Raza's work and thought now centred on the bindu, an iconic symbol in Indian art that can be variously interpreted as zero, drop, seed, or sperm and is the genesis of creation.

This non-representative idiom was loosely based on ancient Indian ideas of the universe and its cyclical forces, and through it, Raza turned from "the external to the internal substance. There is an implicit sense of timelessness which is all-pervasive, which brings a different meaning to his pictures. There is no reference here, as with his earlier work [...] Instead he has 'abstracted' from nature its essence, its deeper implications for mankind." (G. Sen, Bindu: Space and Time in Raza's Vision, New Delhi, 1997, p. 27)

Kundalini represents an awakening of dormant energy, in the body and the universe. Here, this principle is manifested in this painting as a pair of snakes, their coils interspersed and radiating outwards, vibrating with potential energy.

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