Modern & Contemporary South Asian Art

Modern & Contemporary South Asian Art

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 103. Square Composition 9.

Property from a Private Collection, Singapore

Anwar Jalal Shemza

Square Composition 9

Auction Closed

March 16, 05:25 PM GMT

Estimate

40,000 - 60,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Property from a Private Collection, Singapore

Anwar Jalal Shemza

1928 - 1985

Square Composition 9 


Oil on hardboard

Signed and dated in Urdu upper right. Further signed, dated, titled and inscribed '"Square Composition / 9" / Oil on hardboard / 61 x 61 cm / Shemza / 1963' on reverse 

24 x 23 ⅞ in. (60.9 x 60.6 cm.)

Unframed

Painted in 1963 

Acquired from the artist's family, 2005 
Catalogue, The Asal Collection, Asal Partners Limited, 2009, illustration pl. 73, p. 94

“One circle, one square, one problem, one life is not enough to solve it”.


 - Translation of Urdu inscription on Anwar Jalal Shemza’s 1962 work One to Nine and One to Seven


The art of Anwar Jalal Shemza holds a multitude of influences. The artist sought inspiration in the modernist abstraction of Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky and Piet Mondrian, as well as in patterns and shapes found in Islamic calligraphy, Mughal architecture and the letters of the Roman alphabet. Above all, it was the fundamental forms of the circle and the square which Shemza tirelessly explored in his work.  


The late 1950s and early 1960s were a period of great critical acclaim for Shemza. He was part of the triumvirate of artists from the subcontinent – along with Francis Newton Souza and Avinash Chandra – who showed together at Victor Musgrave's influential Gallery One in London in the 1960s. Shemza also held notable one-man exhibitions around England, at New Vision Centre (1959), Gallery One (1960), Durham's Gulbenkian Museum (1963) and Oxford's Ashmolean Museum (1964).


Painted in 1963, Square Composition 9 dates to this period of critical success and depicts the distinctive visual vocabulary for which the artist is lauded. Here, Shemza cleverly assembles simple forms into a complex yet perfectly balanced configuration. This painting is a powerful homage to the humble circle and square which helped to shape Shemza’s idiosyncratic practice.