Akbar Padamsee
(1928 - 2020)
Untitled (Nude)
The human form is a recurring presence in Akbar Padamsee’s work and offers a vital lens through which to trace the evolution of his visual language. His earliest figures of the 1950s are rigid and iconic, stylistically drawing from diverse sources including ancient Indian temple sculpture, traditional African art, medieval Christian imagery, and the works of European painters such as Georges Rouault. By the end of the decade, these forms...
The human form is a recurring presence in Akbar Padamsee’s work and offers a vital lens through which to trace the evolution of his visual language. His earliest figures of the 1950s are rigid and iconic, stylistically drawing from diverse sources including ancient Indian temple sculpture, traditional African art, medieval Christian imagery, and the works of European painters such as Georges Rouault. By the end of the decade, these forms acquired a new fluidity as the thick black contours that once encased them dissipated. They became, as Geeta Kapur has observed, “wholly human and, for that reason, wholly vulnerable. However, for that reason they did not lose their power of transmittance. The body was handled as though it were a sounding board for the spirit and the figures retained a profound quality of sentience; an aspect at once attentive and remote, intimate and monumental.” (Geeta Kapur, “Akbar Padamsee: The Other Side of Solitude”, Contemporary Indian Artists , New Delhi: Vikas Publishing House Pvt. Ltd, 1978, p. 102) Rather than exploring the body’s plasticity, Padamsee used figuration to examine the psychological and emotional complexities of the human condition. His figures are usually solitary and set against a nondescript background that detaches them from the specificities of time and space. In the present lot, the female nude departs from convention and resists being read as an object of desire. Remote and self-contained, she appears absorbed in her inner world, her head inclined and eyes closed. Kapur remarks, “There was about these figures an unforgettable gravity—note how the woman’s head was always tilted and bent forward in a beautiful gesture of reserve and acquiescence... And there was a sense of chastity in them, for their bodies were conspicuously unsensuous though by no means untouched by love. The woman had a fully human grace, not gifted but earned; a grace gained in solitude, an extreme and unrelieved solitude which need not be, though it is so often, identified with suffering.” (Kapur, p. 103) The work belongs to a series of heavily textured nudes that Padamsee painted in the early 1960s using sharp, almost violent impasto strokes and a luminous but harshly contrasting tonal palette. It marks a shift from his preceding ‘grey period’, during which he limited himself to varying shades of grey, and a return to a warm colour palette of deep oranges, yellows, and reds. These experiments with colour and its application would soon lead to the development of his celebrated Metascapes of the following decade. Even as defined contours dissolved, Padamsee’s commitment to structure remained. As Shamlal observed in his 1964 essay, “It is always the composition of planes and colours which give form to what Padamsee has to say… In Padamsee’s work colour is always subordinate to a structural basis.” He further noted that the dense textures of this period were “by no means a superfluous detail,” but “part of the meaning of the picture. It is not only the richer design of these paintings but their more mellow use of colour which distinguishes them from Padamsee’s earlier work.” (Shamlal, “Padamsee”, Bhanumati Padamsee, Annapurna Garimella eds., Akbar Padamsee: Work in Language , Mumbai: Marg Publications in association with Pundole Art Gallery, 2010, p. 328) With its provenance tracing to the registrar of Galerie Pacitti, the present lot offers insight into Padamsee’s formative years in Paris and the network of artistic and professional relationships that shaped his early career. He moved to the city in 1951 after graduating from the J J School of Art in Bombay and joined contemporaries S H Raza, F N Souza, and Ram Kumar in their study of the international avant- garde. That same year he held a group exhibition with Raza and Souza at Galerie Raymond Creuze. This Paris period crucially shaped each artist’s search for a visual language that could integrate Indian and Western influences while articulating the evolving realities of a newly independent India and, in doing so, played a vital role in defining the trajectory of modern Indian art.“I don’t paint forms. Forms emerge from the dynamism of movement.” - AKBAR PADAMSEE
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Lot
48
of
70
SPRING LIVE AUCTION
17 MARCH 2026
Estimate
Rs 4,00,00,000 - 6,00,00,000
$444,445 - 666,670
ARTWORK DETAILS
Akbar Padamsee
Untitled (Nude)
Signed and dated 'PADAMSEE/ 62' (upper left)
1962
Oil on canvas
36.25 x 28.5 in (92 x 72.5 cm)
PROVENANCE André Pacitti, Galerie Pacitti, Paris Christie's, New York, 23 March 2010, lot 54 Distinguished American Collection Christie's, New York, 18 September 2024, lot 665
EXHIBITEDPadamsee , Montreal: Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal, 15 March - 10 April 1966 PUBLISHEDPadamsee , Montreal: Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal, 1966 Anupa Mehta, "The Inherent Lightness of Being: Akbar Padamsee's Ouevre of the '50s", Bhanumati Padamsee, Annapurna Garimella eds., Akbar Padamsee: Work in Language , Mumbai: Marg Publications in association with Pundole Art Gallery, 2010, p. 146 (illustrated)
Category: Painting
Style: Figurative
ARTWORK SIZE:
Height of Figure: 6'