Never-seen-before works of MF Husain and Amrita Sher-Gil up for auction at Sotheby's in Mumbai

After its debut art auction in India last year, Sotheby's second 'Boundless: India' sale will take place on November 15
Art auction house, Sotheby's
Art auction house, Sotheby's
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After its debut art auction in India last year, Sotheby's second 'Boundless: India' sale will take place on November 15 here, and is highlighted by a 1940 Amrita Sher-Gil painting and two MF Husain works, one of which is a never-before-seen photograph.

The 61-lot auction, set to take place in the Taj Mahal Palace in Mumbai, will feature modern and contemporary South Asian art, photography, prints and design.

It includes an Untitled (Windsor Lad) oil canvas by Amrita Sher-Gil (1913 - 1941). As per Sotheby's, it is a National Art Treasure under the Indian law and cannot be exported outside of India.

<em>Untitled (Windsor Lad) oil canvas by Amrita Sher-Gil (1913 - 1941) Source: IANS</em>
Untitled (Windsor Lad) oil canvas by Amrita Sher-Gil (1913 - 1941) Source: IANS

"This painting was made at the behest of the Maharaja Of Rajpipla and is meant to be a portrait of Windsor Lad, one of the most famous racehorses of the 20th century. Windsor Lad was owned by the Maharajah and won the Epsom Derby in 1934," Sotheby's said.

The Maharaja commissioned this painting of his favourite horse in 1940 after he saw a Lucknow exhibition of Sher-Gil's work, it added.

It is estimated to fetch between INR 4.5-6.5 crore.

A 1969 oil-on-canvas titled Blue Boy On Tree Top by one of India's most-known painters, Husain (1913-2011) is estimated to go between INR 80 lakh and INR 1.2 crores.

Its composition is based on a scene "frequently depicted in both the folk and classical miniature tradition. This work depicts Krishna hiding in a tree having stolen clothes from his devoted Gopis (milk-maids) whilst they bathe in a river. The fervent devotion to Krishna by the Gopis of Vrindavan is often employed as an example of bhakti(Devotion through Love)," said the auction house.

Another work by him, which Sotheby's tags as his "rarest" and "never-before-seen in public", is a photograph created in 1976 in Switzerland, when Husain was working on producing a coffee table book called Triangles meant for private circulation.

It "encompasses one of Husain's most important and evocative themes: women. A woman, represented here twice, is shown in dynamic movement. The duplication of her body results in a hybrid form, one which appears powerfully liberated from romanticism and eroticism. Painted on her torso is another of Husain's other enduring motifs, the elephant. By exaggerating the upper body, Husain plays with the discomfort of the viewer's gaze, and through the use of dark shadow he represents the expressiveness of the human body to its fullest".

<em>Art by MF Husain.Source: IANS</em>
Art by MF Husain.Source: IANS

It is estimated to fetch between INR 6-8 lakh.

As per Sotheby's, it also includes an unseen, untitled painting by one of India's most important modern abstract painters, Vasudeo S. Gaitonde, done in 1974.

This auction following Sotheby's inaugural auction in Mumbai, which totalled to INR 55.40 crores or $7.9 million.

Highlights included Tyeb Mehta's Durga Mahisasura Mardini, which sold for INR 20.49 crores ($2.9 million) and Amrita Sher-Gil's The Little Girl in Blue, selling for INR 18.69 crores ($2.7 million) setting a record price for Sher-Gil in India.
 

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