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Lot No. 125
               SATISH GUJRAL

               1925-2020

               UNTITLED
               36 x 36 in (91.4 x 91.4 cm)
               Mixed media on textured canvas
               Signed: Top Right

               ` 30,00,000 - 40,00,000 | $ 37,037 - 49,383

               Provenance: Property from a collection based in Mumbai






















               Satish Gujral was an internationally celebrated artist, muralist, sculptor,
               architect, and writer. In his quest to establish a uniquely Indian artistic identity,
               free from European influences, Gujral emerged as a key figure in shaping
               modernism in post-Independence India.

               Born in Jhelum, Punjab, in 1925, Gujral’s early years were steeped in drawing
               and Urdu literature, shaped in part by his hearing disability. In 1939, he enrolled
               at the Mayo School of Art in Lahore. By 1944, he had joined Sir J J School of
               Art in Bombay, where he encountered members of the Progressive Artists’
               Group (PAG). However, Gujral distanced himself from the PAG’s interpretation
               of  modernism,  which  was  heavily  influenced  by  European  aesthetics  and
               techniques. Instead, he pursued a distinctly Indian artistic vision rooted in
               indigenous traditions.
               In 1952, Gujral received a scholarship to study at the Palacio de Bellas Artes in
               Mexico City, where he apprenticed under renowned muralists Diego Rivera and
               David Alfaro Siqueiros, key figures in the muralist movement. Their influence
               spurred Gujral to create large fresco murals, which were highly sought after in
               both India and abroad.
               Over the following decades, Gujral exhibited his works worldwide and received
               numerous accolades. He was a three-time recipient of the National Award for
               painting and sculpture and, in 1999, was conferred the Padma Vibhushan,
               India’s second-highest civilian honour. Additionally, the Belgian government
               awarded him the ‘Order of the Crown’ in recognition of his design for the Belgian
               Embassy in New Delhi, which was later listed by an international jury as one of
               1000 outstanding buildings of the 20th century.
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