拍品專文
Sunayani Chattopadhyay, popularly known as Sunayani Devi, was born in 1875 in Jorasanko Thakur Bari, the ancestral home of the Tagores, one of Bengal’s most well-known aristocratic families. Her uncle Rabindranath Tagore was a celebrated polymath and Asia’s first Nobel laureate, and her brothers Abanindranath and Gaganendranath Tagore were respected painters and teachers. Together, the family led the artistic and literary renaissance that swept through India from the heart of Bengal in the nineteenth century.
Although she was not formally trained in art like her brothers, Sunayani Devi grew up observing them work and developed an interest in painting. The themes of Sunayani Devi’s work and her subjects draw as much from Indian mythology and epics like the Mahabharata and Ramayana as they do from her domestic life in a traditional Bengali household. Her style, often described as naïve or primitive, was inspired by the traditional pata paintings and folk figurines of Bengal, and she is credited as the first modern artist to champion rural and folk art, a trend that artists like Jamini Roy would later embrace.
A pioneering woman artist in modern India, Sunayani Devi’s paintings were exhibited at shows organised by the Indian Society for Oriental Art in Calcutta, Allahabad, London and the United States, including alongside the Bauhaus artists in 1922, as well as at the Women’s International Art Club, London. “Her naïve work was singled out as a continuation of the ‘simple’ art of the Indian village, a contemporary expression of authentic India. The modernist discourse of primitive simplicity and the nationalist discourse of cultural authenticity come together in the image of Sunayani Devi as a nationalist artist.” (P. Mitter, The Triumph of Modernism, India’s Artists and the Avant-garde, 1922-1947, New Delhi, 2007, p. 43)
Although she was not formally trained in art like her brothers, Sunayani Devi grew up observing them work and developed an interest in painting. The themes of Sunayani Devi’s work and her subjects draw as much from Indian mythology and epics like the Mahabharata and Ramayana as they do from her domestic life in a traditional Bengali household. Her style, often described as naïve or primitive, was inspired by the traditional pata paintings and folk figurines of Bengal, and she is credited as the first modern artist to champion rural and folk art, a trend that artists like Jamini Roy would later embrace.
A pioneering woman artist in modern India, Sunayani Devi’s paintings were exhibited at shows organised by the Indian Society for Oriental Art in Calcutta, Allahabad, London and the United States, including alongside the Bauhaus artists in 1922, as well as at the Women’s International Art Club, London. “Her naïve work was singled out as a continuation of the ‘simple’ art of the Indian village, a contemporary expression of authentic India. The modernist discourse of primitive simplicity and the nationalist discourse of cultural authenticity come together in the image of Sunayani Devi as a nationalist artist.” (P. Mitter, The Triumph of Modernism, India’s Artists and the Avant-garde, 1922-1947, New Delhi, 2007, p. 43)