GAGANENDRANATH TAGORE (1867-1938)
Lots which are Art Treasures under the Art and Ant… 显示更多 NATIONAL ART TREASURE - NON EXPORTABLE
GAGANENDRANATH TAGORE (1867-1938)

The Morning Star

细节
GAGANENDRANATH TAGORE (1867-1938)
The Morning Star
initialed 'G.T.' (lower left); further titled and inscribed 'The Morning Star / Rs. 200/-' (on the reverse)
watercolour on paper
9¾ x 8¼ in. (24.8 x 21 cm.)
Executed circa 1920s
来源
Presented by the artist to the author, Umaprasad Mukhopadhyay, son of Sir Ashutosh Mukhopadhyay
Thence by descent
Acquired from the above by the current owner
出版
8 Bengal Masters - Miracles of Existence, exhibition catalogue, Nice, 2015, p. 19 (illustrated)
注意事项
Lots which are Art Treasures under the Art and Antiquities Act 1972 cannot be exported outside India. Please note that lots are marked as a convenience to you and we shall not be liable for any errors in, or failure to, mark any lot.

拍品专文

Gaganendranath Tagore began to paint late in his life at the age of thirty-eight, much like his uncle Rabindranath Tagore. Along with his brother Abanindranath, he was instrumental in the establishment of the Indian Society of Oriental Art, Calcutta, in 1907. Apart from his early paintings and illustrations, the artist is known for his refined watercolour landscapes, unique, colourful cubist constructions, his experiments with black and white photography, and his portfolios of caricatures like Birupa Bajra and Adbhut Lok, which offered a satirical take on Bengali society of the time.

This painting illuminates the penultimate phase of Tagore’s oeuvre, which ended prematurely in 1930 when the artist suffered a cerebral stroke that left him paralysed for the rest of his life. This ethereal dawn scene executed in watercolour masterfully negotiates the territory between realism and impressionism in the artist’s unique idiom. Most likely one of the artist’s impressions of the temple town of Puri in Orissa, this work is a perfect example of the varied brushwork and wash techniques that he perfected, first under the tutelage of the Japanese artists Kakuzo Okakura and Yokoyama Taikan and then through his own experimental creative process.

Speaking about the artist's work, his uncle Rabindranath Tagore noted, “What profoundly attracted me was the uniqueness of his creation, a lively curiosity in his constant experiments, and some mysterious depth in their imaginative value. Closely surrounded by the atmosphere of a new art movement he sought out his own untrodden path of adventure, attempted marvellous experiments in colouring and made fantastic trials in the magic of light and shade.” (R. Tagore, Journal of the Indian Society of Oriental Art, Vol. 6, Calcutta, 1938)

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