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Painting - Goddess

Goddess

  • Object:

    Painting

  • Place of origin:

    Calcutta, India (made)

  • Date:

    ca. 1940s (made)

  • Artist/Maker:

    Roy, Jamini (Mr), born 1887 - died 1972 (artist)

  • Materials and Techniques:

    Lamp-black and watercolour on card.

  • Museum number:

    IS.23-1978

  • Gallery location:

    In Storage

  • Image in copyright

Jamini Roy (1887-1972) was one of the most important artists of the modern period in India, drawing on the popular and folk traditions of rural Bengal for his inspiration. This work depicts the figure of a highly stylised goddess (possibly Lakshmi) with four outstretched arms. The body is formed from two inverted triangles drawn in bold black strokes and is insect-like. This is one of a series of similar works where the artist has used lamp-black outline taken from the bottom of a kettle with grey wash.

Physical description

The image depicts the figure of a highly stylised goddess (possibly Lakshmi) with four outstretched arms. The body is formed from two inverted triangles drawn in bold black strokes and is insect-like. This is one of a series of similar works where the artist has used lamp-black outline taken from the bottom of a kettle with grey wash.

Place of Origin

Calcutta, India (made)

Date

ca. 1940s (made)

Artist/maker

Roy, Jamini (Mr), born 1887 - died 1972 (artist)

Materials and Techniques

Lamp-black and watercolour on card.

Marks and inscriptions

Signature on right hand corner.

Dimensions

Height: 39.5 cm, Width: 23.3 cm, Height: 41.1 cm Paper upon which card is mounted, Width: 25.2 cm Paper upon which card is mounted

Object history note

Purchased from Mr J. C. Irwin in 1979 who acquired it directly from the artist. This is one of a series of similar works executed in lamp-black taken from the bottom of a kettle. RF:78/14

Historical context note

Jamini Roy (1887-1972) was one of the most important artists of the modern period in India, drawing on the popular and folk traditions of rural Bengal for his inspiration. Born in Beliator, a village in the Bankura district of Bengal, Jamini was raised in a family of small landowners.

In 1906 he entered the Calcutta School of Art and studied under Abanindranath Tagore, the pioneer and leading exponent of the Bengal School of Art. Abanindranath's tutorage secured Jamini's dexterity both in European and indigenous painting traditions. For a short period Jamini became a portrait painter, a skill for which he was highly regarded in Calcutta. He then experimented with Impressionistic landscapes before rejecting his European training in favour of indigenous art forms.

Initially Jamini adopted the Kalighat style of painting, a popular art form with origins in the rural traditions of Bengal, but found thriving in the back streets of Calcutta. However by the 1920s, Jamini felt that Kalighat paintings had lost their rural ideal having being adapted too much to fit the requirements of their new urban environment. Jamini sought to define an authentic modern Indian art; he therefore travelled through Bengali countryside studying folk painting traditions. He developed his own personal style which was characterised by bold lines and flat use of colour. He used indigenous materials, including lamp black for the outline drawing, 7 basic colours (Indian red, yellow ochre, cadmium green, vermilion, grey, blue and white), which he applied with organic tempera, earth and mineral pigments to homemade canvas spun with fabric. His paintings can be divided into three main themes: the everyday life of rural Bengal, particularly the women of the aboriginal Santhal community, Hindu mythological subjects and Christian imagery.

Jamini was a supporter of the Indian independence movement and his search for an authentic modern India was a response to this. Part of his search involved the restoration of the collaborative indigenous artisanal labour model. Thus, in his workshop he produced a range of stock motifs which his apprentices then copied- all were signed with his name. This increased the production and dissemination of original works which were then affordable to a wider body of people, not just the rich. Jamini gained an international reputation during the 1940s; his work was exhibited in London in 1946 and in New York in 1953.

Descriptive line

Goddess, by Jamini Roy, painting in lamp black, Calcutta, ca.1940

Bibliographic References (Citation, Note/Abstract, NAL no)

Partha Mitter, The Triumph of Modernism India' artists and the avant-garde 1922-1947, London, 2007
W.G.Archer, India and Modern Art, London, 1959

Categories

Paintings; Hinduism

Collection code

SSEA

Qr_O82544
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