Submitted by Cayce_Crown on

Amrita we hardly knew ye

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Politics

Another woman who deserves more attention than she has thusfar received.


From the NY Times:


Amrita Sher-Gil, a pioneer of modern Indian art, used her paintbrush to depict the daily lives of Indian women in the 1930s, often revealing a sense of their loneliness and even hopelessness.

She painted women going to the market, women at a wedding, women at home. Sometimes she showed women bonding with other women. At times the worksseemed to convey a sense of silent resolve. It was a rendering rarely seen indepictions of Indian women at the time, when portrayals tended to cast them as happy and obedient.


3 women ASG

 

Sher-Gil was born in Budapest on Jan. 30, 1913, to the Hungarian-Jewish opera singer Marie Antoinette Gottesmann and Umrao Singh Sher-Gil Majithia, a Sikh aristocrat and a scholar of Persian and Sanskrit. She began taking formal art lessons at age 8, when her family moved to Summer Hill, Shimla, in northern India.


Sher-Gil also felt conflicted about her sexuality. She was drawn to the idea of a lesbian affair, Dalmia wrote, “partly as a result of her larger view of woman as astrong individual, liberated from the artifice of convention.”

She did, in fact, have relationships with men, seeing marriage as a way to gain independence from her parents. In 1938, she married a cousin, Victor Egan, revealing only afterward that she was pregnant. He arranged for an abortion.

 

Sher-Gil died on Dec. 5, 1941-at the age of 28. The cause was believed to be complications from a second, failed abortion performed by Egan. She was 28 and was just gaining widespread popularity and taking on commissions.


“I painted a few very good paintings,” she wrote in a letter to her mother inOctober 1931, when she was 18. “Everybody says that I have improved immensely; even that person whose criticism in my view is most important to me — myself.”

 

With her style and her emphasis on women, Sher-Gil became known as the“Indian Frida Kahlo.”

 

"Although I studied, I have never been taught painting because I possess in my psychological makeup a peculiarity that resents any outside interference." -Amrita Sher-Gil

Comments

Submitted by SoniaSaleh on Wed, 12/05/2018 - 03:39

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Sonia Saleh

Never heard of her. Thank you for expanding my knowledge. Will look for her art.
Corey Bearak

When the the story run? Was it part of the obits making up for ones it should have run? And who is Dalmia?

Submitted by MarilynGenoa on Thu, 12/06/2018 - 02:16

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Marilyn Genoa

Thank you for bringing her memory forward.
Cayce Crown

Yes it is part of the obits that were ignored. I think it ran in June 2018. Yashodhara Dalmia was a biographer of Sher-Gil, sorry I didn't make that clear.
Cayce Crown

Thank you for reading. There are many like this.

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