Lot 15
  • 15

GANESH PYNE | Lamp and the Effigy

Estimate
80,000 - 120,000 USD
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Description

  • Ganesh Pyne
  • Lamp and the Effigy
  • Signed and dated in Bengali lower right and on reverse. Bearing artist’s label: ‘LAMP AND THE EFFIGY’ / (TEMPERA ON CANVAS) / GANESH PYNE / FLAT 7B, ‘DAKSHINEE' / 21 JATIN BAGCHEE ROAD / CALCUTTA 700029’ along with a CIMA Gallery label on reverse 
  • Tempera on canvas laid on card
  • 19½ x 17⅞ in. (49.6 x 45.4 cm.)
  • Painted in 1997

Provenance

Acquired from CIMA Gallery, Calcutta in February 1998 
Mr. Alan Kanuk is finance professional who has lived in New York, Hong Kong and Sydney. He took a two year sabbatical in the late 90’s to travel around the world, during which he went to art shows in the United States, Europe and Asia. A planned two week trip in India stretched to three and a half months. Whilst in Calcutta, he chanced upon CIMA Art Gallery and met both Mrs. Rakhi and Ms. Pratiti Sarkar, the owners and directors of CIMA. They became friends and he purchased several artworks from them during his stay. 

Literature

E. Datta, Ganesh Pyne: His Life and Times, CIMA Gallery, Calcutta, 1998, illustration p. 103

Condition

Minor undulation in the work is consistent with the medium. Small spots of discoloration appear inherent. This work is in very good condition, as viewed. It has not been inspected outside its frame The blues are brighter and the yellows more subdued in reality.
In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any statement made by Sotheby's is merely a subjective qualified opinion.
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Catalogue Note

The work of Ganesh Pyne is renowned for its unusual cast of mythological or dreamlike characters. Immersed in the Bengali folklore of his grandmother’s stories from a young age, Pyne's modernism is one which is articulated in this local idiom of ethereal figures and Puranic tropes. The somber palette coupled with the moribund expression of the spectral effigy in this current lot are representative of the artist’s production and can be seen to approach the carnivalesque in its unerring obsession with performativity and death.  Both ideas are common features in Pyne's work, drawing from the worlds of dance and theater as much as it does from religious epics and modern myths. The artist’s childhood was marked by the death of his father when he was just 9 years old, and the later death of his beloved grandmother. Growing up in Calcutta, he saw the Direct Action Day riots of 1946 firsthand, witnessing decaying bodies lying in the street. All castes, high and low, were suddenly reduced to nothing more than their human shells. Pyne recalls seeing a cart full of bodies, amongst them a dead woman from a high caste who was naked, her skin grey, her throat gashed and bloody, her gold necklace still glistening. The violence of Partition, (and the later wars with Pakistan and Bangladesh in the early 1970s) were the turbulent backdrop to Pyne’s formative years. The omnipresence of displaced, alienated people in the city deeply affected the artist, and sheds some light on Pyne’s fixation with the marginal characters of migrants, beggars and social outcasts.

His preoccupation with such figures, and indeed with the condition of anonymity is exemplified in the present work. Lamp and the Effigy may pass at first glance for a portrait, with the large scale figure easily mistaken for a male protagonist. Only upon closer inspection does the viewer notice the dark hollows for eyes and angular edges of a humanoid mask. The awkward, puppet-like posture of the body further emphasizes its lack of agency: this is a figure ready for manipulation, and completely at the mercy of forces beyond the picture frame. This sinister notion of puppetry resonates plainly with the violence inflicted upon civilian refugees in war-torn India, later tossed without ceremony into a mass grave. Pyne’s idiosyncratic depiction of lamplight in the current lot is an excellent example of the artist’s fascination with chiaroscuro, and adds an element of Pyne’s characteristic theatricality. The artist's signature technique of working in tempera was developed in the late 1960s, recalling that of medieval miniaturists who glazed their works with natural dye and used egg-whites as a fixative over each layer of color.  In a similar vein, Pyne created his own binding agents and fixatives from indigenous plant varieties, a particularly laborious process which could often take months. In this painting, the brighter areas also manifest a greater luminosity by way of the tempera finish.