SYED HAIDER RAZA (INDIA, B. 1922)
PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE ASIAN COLLECTION
SYED HAIDER RAZA (INDIA, B. 1922)

Lumière d'Eté

Details
SYED HAIDER RAZA (INDIA, B. 1922)
Lumière d'Eté
signed and dated 'Raza 58' (lower right); bearing label: 'Lumière d'Eté' P 174-58 20F (on the reverse)
oil on canvas
23¾ x 28¾in. (60.3 x 73cm.)
Painted in 1958
Provenance
Gallerie Dresdnere, Canada

Lot Essay

Syed Haider Raza, a member of revolutionary Progressive Artist Group, experimented with currents of Western Modernism moving from Expressionist modes towards greater abstraction and eventually incorporating elements of Neo-Tantrism bourne from Indian scriptural texts. Whereas his fellow contemporaries dealt with more figural subjects, Raza chose to focus on landscapes in the 1940's and 50's, inspired in part by a move to the France in 1949.

Enamoured with the bucolic countryside of rural France, Lumiere d'Ete is part of a series which captures the rolling terrain and quaint village architecture of this region. Showing a collection of houses set against a rich inky blue night sky, Raza uses gestural brushstrokes and a heavily impasto-ed application of paint, stylistic devices which hint at his later 1970s abstractions. This late 50's work is significant in that it represents the turning point between two stages of Raza's artistic development. While subject matter is still recognizable, color and the application of paint become the key elements of the work overpowering the relevancy of the village scene.

What results is "not an outward manifestation of reality as in his earliest works, or the imaginary landscapes in his early gouaches - but the 'real thing', through the substantial realm of color. It is no longer nature as 'seen' or as 'constructed', but nature as experienced." (G. Sen, Bindu: Space and Time in Raza's Vision, New Delhi, 1997, p. 79.)

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