M. F. Husain’s Untitled (Gram Yatra) bought at Christie’s for $13.8 million in New York, making it the most costly work of recent Indian artwork ever publicly auctioned.
That quantity, which incorporates charges, shattered the public sale home’s estimate of $2.5 million–$3.5 million and was greater than 4 occasions the artist’s earlier report of $3.1 million, which was set by his portray Untitled (Reincarnation) final September at Sotheby’s in London.
The earlier report for a contemporary Indian work was $7.4 million, for Amrita Sher-Gil’s The Story Teller (1937), which bought in September 2023 in Mumbai. (S. H. Raza’s 1959 portray Kallisté, which bought final March at Sotheby’s for $5.6 million, was given an estimate of $2 million–$3 million—the best worth ever placed on a contemporary Indian paintings at public sale, a spokesperson for that home stated.)
The Husain report was mintedduring Christie’s sale for South Asian trendy and modern artwork, a class which continues to garner momentum regardless of a fragmented artwork market.
The 1954 portray, which is sort of 14 ft lengthy, was a consignment 13 years within the making and one which Nishad Avari, the New York–based mostly head of Christie’s South Asian trendy and modern artwork division, referred to as “by far one of the important works” he’s seen in his profession.
Avari informed ARTnews that, previous to the sale, his division had hoped Untitled (Gram Yatra) would change Husain’s market, which has lagged in comparison with F. H. Souza and Raza, two different members of the Progressive Artists’ Group.
Of the Husain portray, Avari stated, “It contains of 13 separate vignettes of village life in India, which is admittedly vital, as a result of that is 5 years after Indian independence, and Husain and all his colleagues try to determine on the time what it means to be a contemporary Indian artist.”
Within the portray Untitled (Gram Yatra), Husain emphasizes the centrality of village and rural life in India as the premise for going ahead as a brand new nation. Avari additionally famous that one of many 13 vignettes portrays a standing farmer—the one male determine within the within the piece. This can be a self-portrait of kinds, and the one picture which crosses into one other vignette of a panorama with fields. “It’s actually a portrait of a farmer as a sustainer of the land and a protector of the land,” Avari stated.
The unique proprietor of the portray was Leon Elias Volodarsky, a Norwegian common surgeon and personal artwork collector, who acquired Untitled (Gram Yatra) in New Delhi in 1954, whereas heading a World Well being Group crew stationed there to determine a thoracic surgical procedure coaching heart. Volodarsky’s property donated it to the Oslo College Hospital in 1964.
When the hospital first contacted Christie’s about Untitled (Gram Yatra), Avari stated his crew’s quick response was: “We’re getting on a airplane.”
For seven a long time, Untitled (Gram Yatra) was unavailable for viewing by the general public. “It was in a non-public neuroscience hall,” Avari stated.
The 13-year course of to get it to the public sale block on March 19 included gaining the mandatory permissions from the Oslo College Hospital’s board when the establishment was lastly able to promote. “What’s actually, actually gratifying, is that the proceeds are going for use to arrange a coaching heart for docs in Dr. Volodarsky’s identify,” Avari stated.