Significant Indian Art Significant Indian Art HEMENDRANATH MAZUMDAR (1894 - 1948)
RELATED LOTS
CONTACT US
Catalogue & Viewing
Lot Closed
Accounts & Shipping
Lot Closed
-
Details Details
In this unique 1917 life-size painting titled Aviman or Broken Heart, Hemendranath shows the curvaceous feminine beauty of a disenchanted lover who has turned away from her beloved in anger. Her forlorn stance endears the viewer to her melancholy. In one hand she holds a lily part of which lie torn and neglected at her feet. Hemendranath’s treatment of the body and drapery is so mesmerizing that it is impossible to segregate one from the other. Also commendable is the effecting of muted brilliance of colour that radiates around the rippling muscles of the lady’s back. The painting is a testimony of Hemendranath’s artistry and is also the largest sized work rendered by him, of which there are only a very few, to have ever come up at an auction.
-
Provenance Provenance
PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF A DISTINGUISHED MARWARI FAMILY
-
Literature Literature
An artist of exceptional talent and far ahead of his time, Hemendranath Mazumder (also Mazumdar/Majumdar) was born in erstwhile Bengal (present-day Bangladesh). Hailed as a renowned painter of European academic style, he could not confirm to the ideals of Abanindranath Tagore’s Neo-Bengal School, despite being his close associate.
He was acclaimed for his fine treatment of pastels, watercolours and chalks, though his real forte’ was in handling the medium of oil painting. Hemendranath’s ideals were the European masters whose techniques of oil painting and confident brushwork, he both admired and emulated diligently. His immediate inspiration was also the works of the grand masters of the British Company school - Tilly Kettle, Balthazar Solvyns, Samuel Davis, William Hodges and Johann Zoffany.
The subjects of his paintings were predominantly the native women of Bengal. It was a time when the European ideal of beauty was in vogue. Body, as the mantle of beauty was modestly represented through the curves of flowing diaphanous fabric. Hemendranath created his own niche, by portraying the unassuming feminine beauty of his native land, which he considered no less than the high cannons of Victorian ideals of beauty. Often therefore we see him represent his models draped in wet diaphanous sarees.