M F Husain 
        (1915 - 2011) 
        
        
        Battle of Ganga and Jamuna: Mahabharata 12  
    
    
    
    
        "...The Mahabharata discloses a rich civilisation and highly evolved society which, though of an older world, strangely resembles the India of our time..." "...The Mahabharata discloses a rich civilisation and highly evolved society which, though of an older world, strangely resembles the India of our time..." The Making of Modern Indian Art: The Progressives,  Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2001, p. 101)Mahabharata  series, including works such as the present lot. The first of these he painted as a series of 27 works when he was invited to participate in the Sao Paulo Biennial in 1971. The present lot, painted in 1972, is an important work in this series and was once part of the famous Chester and Davida Herwitz collection. In 1982, it was exhibited at the seminal show India: Myth & Reality, Aspects of Modern Indian Art  at the Museum of Modern Art in Oxford, UK, curated by Ebrahim Alkazi, Victor Musgrave and David Elliot. In 2008, it sold in auction at $1.6 million, a world record price for the artist at the time.Mahabharata , a founding text in Hindu mythology, details the many years of conflict between two warring clans: the Pandavas (the heroes) and the Kauravas (the villains). Its ultimate thematic sentiment of right versus wrong - influenced by the many complexities of morality, duty, power and fate - is one that has impacted the Hindu Indian psyche on a social and anthropological level. "Husain's concept is intensely poetic: with a stroke of genius, the entire mythic world which has enriched the minds of the common people is brought vividly alive. Past and present, myth and reality are shown to exist simultaneously in the Indian imagination." (E Alkazi, M F Husain: The Modern Artist & Tradition,  New Delhi: Art Heritage, 1978, p. 17)Mahabharata , ultimately resulting in the epic battle of Kurukshetra, where Arjuna and his brothers defeat the evil Kauravas. Throughout his career, Husain was preoccupied with pictorially engaging ancient Indian epics and to make them "speak again in the light of recent Indian history and contemporary Indian geo-political life. Specifically, he is convinced that themes of fate and of power one finds in the Mahabharata and Ramayana  are universally true of the modern world and can be re-enacted on the modern Indian canvas." (Dr Daniel Herwitz, Husain , Bombay: Tata Steel, 1988, p. 22)Mahabharata , and the metaphor it represents about the internal moral struggles within an individual self. He explores this concept by quoting Gandhi: "I regard Duryodhana and his party as the baser impulses in man, and Arjuna and his party as the higher impulses. The field of battle is our own body. An eternal battle is going on between two camps and the poet seer has vividly described it." (Quoted in Herwitz, p. 25)Mahabharata  spring from the same lineage, just as the two rivers Gunga (Ganges) and Jumna share a common source in the Himalayas. Husain portrays these two rivers - these two families - in the act of division. His representation is one of chaotic and violent separation." (Herwitz, p. 25)mudra  and the tribhanga  pose, both inspired by his early years studying ancient Indian sculptures. Even his former practice of painting film posters and billboards can be seen in the scale of the work. "Husain projects the epic's monumentality and pageantry in almost cinematic terms. His canvases are huge, densely packed and animated. Some seem to layer filmic images telescopically. Together the canvases can be read as if the precis of a film. As a young man Husain made his living painting the huge film posters one can see splashed across the walls of Indian cities. He grasped a continuity between these and the more ancient Indian sense of monumentality, but also the general idea the cinemascope is our century's way of presenting the larger-than-life with immediacy. What better way to modernize the epical than to present it as cinematic." (Herwitz, pp. 24-25)Barefoot Across the Nation: Maqbool Fida Husain & the Idea of India,  Noida: Yoda Press, 2011, p. 237)Zameen ... Already serious art enthusiasts and collectors, the Herwitzes eagerly sought out the artist's work and began to acquire paintings. They soon had the opportunity to meet Husain and struck up a friendship that lasted their lifetimes." (Bean, p. 236)Mahabharata  paintings, which perhaps included the present lot. Over the years, Husain introduced them to many artists, and the collection grew to include works by more than 70 Indian artists. The Herwitzes did not simply buy art: they engaged with it on a cerebral level and were deeply involved with artists, art critics and gallerists. Through their active support of Indian artists, they were, in a way, instrumental in placing Indian art on the international scene. "Within a few years of their first acquisition, the Herwitzes had become part of the Indian art movement, in dialog with artists who appreciated their serious interest, buying at a time when few others did, and advocating for exhibitions of Indian art in Europe and America, to which they lent liberally." (Bean, p. 237)
    
    
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                    SPRING LIVE AUCTION | MUMBAI, LIVE
                     
                
                    Estimate
                    
                        Rs 12,00,00,000 - 18,00,00,000
                          
                      
                 
                
                    Winning Bid 
                
                    Rs 13,44,00,000
                     
                
                
                
                
            
            
            
       
     
     
    
    
    ARTWORK DETAILS 
    
        M F Husain Battle of Ganga and Jamuna: Mahabharata 12  
        Signed and dated 'Husain 72 1/2' and signed again in Devnagari (lower left and upper right)
    
        
        
    
    PROVENANCE
    EXHIBITEDM F Husain: The Modern Artist and Tradition - A Retrospective , presented by Art Heritage at New Delhi: Lalit Kala Akademi, 1978-79India: Myth & Reality, Aspects of Modern Indian Art , Oxford: Museum of Modern Art, 27 June - 8 August 1982M F Husain: The Modern Artist and Tradition,  New Delhi: Art Heritage, 1978, pl. 33 (illustrated)India: Myth & Reality, Aspects of Modern Indian Art , Oxford: Museum of Modern Art, 1982, p. 6 (illustrated)Husain , Bombay: Tata Steel Publications, 1998, p. 103 (illustrated)Ebrahim Alkazi: Directing Art - The Making of a Modern Indian Art World , Ahmedabad: Mapin Publishing and New Delhi: Art Heritage Gallery, 2016, p. 66 (illustrated)
    
        Category: Painting