Page 182 - Iconic Masters October2023
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The artist’s drawing of planned panels for the ‘Oh My Dear Calcutta’ series.










               Lot No. 151

               JOGEN CHOWDHURY
               b. 1939

               OH MY DEAR CALCUTTA (PART V)
               60 x 60 in (152.4 x 152.4 cm)
               Acrylic on canvas
               2012

               ` 30,00,000 - 40,00,000 | $ 35,294 - 47,059

               Provenance: Property from a collection based in New Delhi.

               This lot will be offered without a reserve.




               The presented lot was originally part of a large-scale   quality. His preoccupation with contorted bodies,
               work  titled  ‘Oh  My  Dear  Calcutta’  which  spanned  25   expressive faces, and commentary on socio-political
               feet and was composed of five panels. The panels   issues is evident in this work. Although it doesn’t settle
               all feature scenes that depict Jogen Chowdhury’s   into a narrative, the characters seem to hold deep
               interpretations of his memories of his hometown. They   meaning for both the artist and the viewer. The work
               are an ode to the rich culture and multiple facets of   flows fluidly through being replete with symbolism and
               the city of Kolkata. While the panels amalgamated to   narration, a message relayer and hieroglyphics, making
               narrate a larger story about the city, they also remain   it complex and inviting.
               self-reliant and coherent on their own. With their unique
               compositional elements, each panel tells a tale of the   Jogen Chowdhury was born in 1939 in pre-partition
               Chowdhury’s  Kolkata  and  are  both  independent  and   Bengal. He studied at the Government College of Art
               cohesive.                               and Crafts, Kolkata from 1955 to 1960 and then went
                                                       onto L’Ecole Nationale Superior des Beax-Arts, Paris,
               Executed in the artist’ signature style, the work displays   on a scholarship from the French government in 1965.
               his affinity for freely rendered figures made of bold lines   He  has  been  the recipient of several awards  during
               and caricature-like features. Each panel is constructed   his career including the Kalidas Samman by the
               with an impressive attention to detail with distorted   Government of Madhya Pradesh in 2001 and the Banga
               figures playing a large role in lending to its surreal   Bibhushan award by the Government of West Bengal.
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