K K Hebbar 
        (1911 - 1996) 
        
        
        Untitled  
     
    
    
    
    
         
         
         
"The time has passed for artists to be patronized. They must now have a standing of their own." 
 
Kattingeri Krishna Hebbar was born in 1911 at Kattingeri in the Udupi district of Karnataka. His father used to make clay idols of Lord Ganesha during festivals and this background in folk art helped Hebbar decide that he wanted to pursue art as a career. Despite training in the Western tradition, Hebbar’s body of work remained... 
         
"The time has passed for artists to be patronized. They must now have a standing of their own." 
 
Kattingeri Krishna Hebbar was born in 1911 at Kattingeri in the Udupi district of Karnataka. His father used to make clay idols of Lord Ganesha during festivals and this background in folk art helped Hebbar decide that he wanted to pursue art as a career. Despite training in the Western tradition, Hebbar’s body of work remained rooted in the folk traditions of India. After some initial training in Mysore and later in Mumbai at the Sir J.J. School of Art, he started his career as an art instructor at the Sir J. J. School of Art  and taught there between 1940 and 1945. He then went to Europe to study art at the Academy Julian in Paris. 
 
During his early years, known as his Kerala period (because he painted landscapes of the state extensively), Hebbar was highly influenced by Paul Gauguin and Amrita Sher Gill. The body of work he created during this period, covering more or less a decade starting from 1946, is considered extremely influential in the development of modern Indian art and occupies an important place in Indian art history. 
 
Hebbar’s idiom is a unique combination of impressionistic and expressionistic techniques. A strong social concern made him focus on subjects like poverty, hunger and the destruction wrought by nuclear weapons. At the other end of the spectrum lie his drawings and paintings that capture the grace of dance performances, influence by his study of the classical Indian dace form, Kathak. Throughout his career, Hebbar never ceased to experiment, and enriched his artistic vocabulary through several trips around the country, including those to important historical sites like the ancient caves at Karla, in Maharashtra. One of the sketches that resulted from this particular trip won him a gold medal from the Bombay Art Society. 
 
Hebbar always held that an artist's role was to tell the truth about his feelings without any dilution. Due to his opposition to the politicization of art, he was not a part of any of the many artist groups that thrived in India during the 1940s and 50s; and yet he played an important part in the organization of artists in Bombay, and was closely associated with the Jehangir and Chemould Art Galleries in the city. 
 
Hebbar’s posthumous exhibitions include 'Long Gone & Living Now' at Gallerie Mirchandani + Steinreucke, Mumbai, in 2009; ‘K. K. Hebbar – In Remembrance’ at the Fine Art Company, Mumbai, in 1999; and ‘K. K. Hebbar – Paintings, Drawings, Publications’ organized by the K.K. Hebbar Art Foundation at the Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai, in 1997. Hebbar had numerous solo exhibitions throughout his career, some of which include ‘K.K. Hebbar – Exhibition of Paintings’ at Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi, in 1993; ‘Indian Drawing Today’ at Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai, in 1987; and ‘K.K. Hebbar – Retrospective’ at Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai, in 1980. He has also participated in the 1955 Venice Biennale, and the 1959 Sao Paulo Biennale.
 
Hebbar was honoured with a number of awards through his career, including the Padma Bhushan by the President of India in 1989, and the Maharashtra Shasan ‘Gourav Puraskar’ in 1990.
 
K.K. Hebbar died in 1996, aged 85. 
    
    
    
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            Lot
                    40
                    of
                    100
                     
            
 
                 
                 
             
            
            
                
                    WINTER AUCTION 2009
                     
                    9-10 DECEMBER 2009
                 
                 
                
                    Estimate
                     
                    
                        Rs 12,00,000 - 15,00,000
                         
                        $26,090 - 32,610
                      
                      
                 
                 
                 
                
                 
                
                
                    Winning Bid 
                 
                
                    Rs 13,80,000
                     
                    $30,000 
                 
                (Inclusive of Buyer's Premium)
                 
                
                
             
                
                 
                
                
                
                
            
            
            
       
     
     
    
    
    ARTWORK DETAILS 
    
        K K Hebbar  
         
        Untitled  
        Signed in English (lower right) 
        
        Oil on canvas 
        
        23 x 29 in (58.4 x 73.7 cm) 
       
    
    
        
        
    
    
    
    
        Category: Painting 
        Style: Still Life                                        
    
    
            
           
                  
         
    
            
          
         
            
            
       
       
           
     
        
         
             
             
            
            
                
             
            
         
        
        ARTWORK SIZE: 
        
        
            
             
                Height of Figure: 6'