Lot 114
  • 114

Tyeb Mehta (b. 1925)

Estimate
800,000 - 1,000,000 USD
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Description

  • Tyeb Mehta
  • Untitled
  • Signed and dated 'Tyeb/ 87' on reverse
  • Oil on canvas
  • 67 by 54 1/4 in. (170 by 138 cm.)

Literature

Ranjit Hoskote, Tyeb Mehta: Ideas, Images, Exchanges, New Delhi, 2005, p 164 illustrated

Catalogue Note

It was in 1965 that Tyeb Mehta painted the first of his Falling Figures series. The work won him a Gold medal in India's first Triennale following which he was awarded the Rockefeller Foundation grant in 1968 to work and study in the United States for a year. Following his visit to New York his canvases undergo a reorganization both in terms of composition and application of color. Large flat planes of color dominate the work, accompanied by figures executed with a sparseness of line that becomes a hallmark of his later works. Mehta returned to his Falling Figure series in the late 1980s upon his return from Santiniketan where he was an artist-in-residence.

Mehta, like many artists of his generation, had been witness to the horrific events that took place in India during and after Partition and his memories of this period clearly had an immense impact on him and the vocabulary of his art. The artist states, 'There were elements of violence in my childhood...One incident left a deep impression on me. At the time of Partition I was living in Mohemmadali Road which was virtually a Muslim ghetto. I remember a young man being slaughtered in the street below my window. The crowd beat him to death, smashed his head with stones. I was sick with fever for days afterwards and the image still haunts me today. That violence gave me the clue about the emotion I want to paint. That violence has stuck in my mind.' (Ranjit Hoskote, Tyeb Mehta: Ideas Images Exchanges, New Delhi, 2005).

Figures are constants in his work: the falling human figure, the falling bird, the trussed bull, the buffalo demon of Hindu myth and the Goddess Kali, all of them are linked by the distortion of the form through violent activity. The figure is either the victim of violence or has the pent up primal potential for violent activity. Dalmia states, 'Tyeb Mehta...brings about an almost violent rhythm in his human forms. A recurring motif in his work has been the falling figure, which seems to be hurtling downwards and yet is suspended, limbs spreading like a projectile and an expression of frozen horror on the face. The figure etched with minimal lines, manifests an intense pain.' (Yashodhara Dalmia, The Making of Modern Indian Art: The Progressives, New Delhi, 2001, p. 218).

In the current work the figure plunges from light to darkness, the figure itself dissecting the canvas from upper right to lower left, a compositional reflection of his earlier diagonal series. Yet despite the distortion of limbs and the inherent violence of his imagery, the potency of Tyeb's work lies in the balance of harmonious tones and lines within these vibrant minimalist compositions. The central figure is elevated to an iconic realm where the violence appears serene and the anguish of the figure demands our pathos.