Following a record-breaking sequence of South Asian artwork auctions over the previous two years, Christie’s will now maintain its first London sale of South Asian Fashionable and up to date artwork since 2019.
Elegant Shadows, scheduled for 11 June, will deliver collectively 93 works from an nameless non-public assortment in June, together with items by India’s main Modernists.
It comes amid an unprecedented increase available in the market for Indian artwork. Alongside record-breaking gross sales—the South Asian Fashionable and Modern sale at Christie’s New York netted $27m, the very best complete for a single sale of Indian work outdoors India—curatorial curiosity has grown and Indian artwork is more and more represented in worldwide festivals.
Whereas the worldwide market stays sluggish, there has by no means been a greater time for the Indian artwork, in accordance with Damian Vesey, Christies’ worldwide specialist in South Asian Fashionable and Modern. The report value within the class, $13.8m—paid final yr at Christies’ in New York for a portray by the Mumbai-based Modernist M.F. Husain—is greater than 3 times what it was 20 years in the past. We’re in, Vesey tells The Artwork Newspaper, “a constructive cycle the place, because the market grows, you’re extra capable of get the highest-quality works”. The record-breaking Husain, he says, was the product of 13 years’ of negotiations with the consigner.
The indications are that the excessive stage of curiosity is right here to remain. Though the consumers are nonetheless principally South Asian—gathering tastes within the area nonetheless broadly match nationwide origin—Vesey observes that at present’s “purchaser base usually has grow to be extra educated, extra discerning, extra within the art-historical context”. This units it other than the final, short-lived increase within the Indian artwork market, within the mid-2000s, when many consumers sought to spend money on Indian artwork extra speculatively. Now, too, “worldwide establishments are increasingly engaged with the class,” he says. “That may assist introduce these artists to the broader [art-historical] canon”.
Elegant Shadows will probably be Christies’ first South Asian Fashionable artwork sale in London in seven years. The 93 works had been acquired between the Nineties and early 2000s, and skew closely in direction of Bengal. Amongst them are a novel sequence of works by the Kolkata-based painter Ganesh Pyne (1937-2013), whose delicate tempera work mix the affect of Bengali folk-art with a darkish, Surrealist sensibility; ephemeral clay collectible figurines of the type present in villages and temples all throughout the Ganges Delta are depicted damaged up in brooding, jagged backgrounds. Works by Pyne are exceedingly uncommon, with a portray from the identical assortment exceeding its estimate seven instances in Christies’ March sale to promote for $2.3m.
Meera Mukherjee, Untitled (Wheel Builders), Estimate £60,000 -80,000
Christie’s
The sale will display “what Modernism in Bengal means for Modernism in all of South Asia,” Vesey says. “It actually begins with [the Nobel laureate Rabindranath] Tagore and [the university and art school he founded at] Santiniketan.” The gathering will embrace works by early twentieth century Bengali painters like Tagore’s brother Abanindranath Tagore and Ram Kinkar Baij, who had been among the many first artists to experiment with an Indian type of Modernism. Alongside a exceptional sculpture by the late twentieth century artist Meera Mukherjee (1923-1998), the sale will characteristic Santiniketan alumnus Somnath Hore (1921-2006), who was taught by the Bengali, later Pakistani, and finally Bangladeshi, grasp Zainul Abedin (1914-1976) on the Authorities Faculty in Calcutta earlier than the Partition of 1947, in addition to the Bangladeshi summary painter Mohammad Kibria (1929-2011), who was Abedin’s scholar in Dhaka after the Partition.

Mohammad Kibria, Untitled (1990), £10,000-15,000
Christie’s
Although Christie’s argues it doesn’t symbolize a shift in technique or elevated organisational funding within the South Asian market, the choice to carry the sale in London outdoors of the standard, twice-yearly New York schedule gives additional proof of competitors available in the market. Final autumn, Sotheby’s in London held what was then the highest-selling public sale within the class, realising $25.5m, days after the Delhi auction-house Saffronart bought 85 heaps for $40.2m. On this yr’s March auctions of South Asian artwork, Christie’s $27m might have overwhelmed Sotheby’s $22m, however Sotheby’s broke new floor, setting 12 new artists’ information, together with 5 for Bangladeshi Modernists, who’ve hitherto attracted little educational or business consideration.
London: a key hub for South Asian artwork
London, with its capital markets and cultural ties to the subcontinent, has established itself as a key hub for collectors of South Asian artwork. As Vesey factors out, many South Asian consumers spend the summer time months within the British capital, which has seen a stunning proliferation of South Asian institutional exhibitions within the final two years: on the Royal Academy, the Serpentine Gallery, the V&A and the Barbican.
That’s the reason India’s largest public sale home, Astaguru, has determined to arrange operations in London, with their first superb artwork sale additionally scheduled for June. “Our purchasers are nonetheless predominantly Indian, however the digital platform permits consumers to purchase anyplace on the planet,” says Astaguru’s managing director within the UK, Laryssa Jesse. The provision of latest materials from non-public collections in Europe and North America, along with Indian consumers’ presence within the UK, made London a logical venue for growth. “We wish to service our purchasers on a extra native foundation,” Jesse provides.
Christie’s is assured, Vesey says, that elevated competitors is “a mirrored image of the depth and energy of the market”.






