
|
|
Back to homepage
|
| Artist:
Jagdish Swaminathan |
| Title: Untitled
|
| 57.50" x
92.25" |
Oil
and wax/Canvas |
Low Est.: |
$300,000 |
|
| Created: 1991 |
Signed and Dated |
High Est.: |
$500,000 |
|
| |
Lot: 538 |
Sales
Price:** |
$530,500 |
|
| Auction House: |
Christie's New York, Rockefeller Center |
09/16/2009 |
|
|
|

Artwork images are
copyright of the artist or assignee |
| |
|
|
Provenance:
PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF THE TIMES OF INDIA
GROUP, INDIA
Notes:
Swaminathan oscillates between lucidity that captures
the most abstract ideas into jewel-like analogies and
dark obscurity, where the ideas that swarm fail to
emerge to the surface in words or in images. (G.
Kapur, 'Reaching Out to the Past', Lalit Kala
Contemporary 40, March 1995, p. 17) In the early
1990s, Swaminathan's paintings underwent a dramatic
shift in technique as there was a tremendous growth in
his fascination with tribal motifs in Modern Art, which
soon led to the abandonment of his typical compositions
of Bird, Mountain, and Tree series. The
significance in the role of texture gradually increased
giving these paintings an energy not previously seen in
his oeuvre. The common use of geometric shapes,
especially triangles as seen in the present work, take
on symbolic significance. On first glance, its structure
is similar to a mountain. If explored further in a
representational context, the mountain symbolizes the
abode of the Hindu god Shiva. The individual elements in
his works take on a greater role and imbue the paintings
with additional layers of meaning. They take on a
totemic role "capable of exercising its magical eternal
influence on those who come within its field of vision."
(J. Swaminathan, 'The Cube and the Rectangle', op. c
Lalit Kala Contemporary 40, March 1995, p. 23)
|
| |
|
Back to homepage
|
| Copyright © 1999-2009
AskART.com and underlying auction houses. All Rights
Reserved. Digital copying of these images and content
strictly prohibited; violators will be subject to the
law including the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. |
|