
Windmills of the Mind
Lot offered for sale by Cowley Abbott, Toronto at the auction event "Artwork from a Canadian Private Collection (Fall 2020 Session)" held on Tue, Dec 15, 2020.
Lot 36397
Lot 36397
Estimate: CAD $500 - $700
Realised: CAD $420
Realised: CAD $420
Lot description - from the online catalogue*
Provenance:
Acquired directly from Walter Moos, Toronto
A Private Canadian Collection
Notes:
Indian artist Avinash Chandra studied painting at the Delhi Polytechnic, and quickly found acclaim thereafter, winning First Prize at the 1954 First National Art Exhibition of Art, in New Delhi. Despite his early success, Chandra was dissatisfied with the art world, and left India for the United Kingdom in 1956. In London he was struck by the expressionist paintings of Vincent Van Gogh and Chaim Soutine, which greatly inspired Chandra's dramatic abstract landscape and figural works. The artist developed a unique expressive painterly style of intricate interlacing forms that often straddled the abstract and representational. He soon became one of the first Indian artists to achieve widespread international recognition. Chandra was the first Indian artist to exhibit at one of the most important art events worldwide - Documenta in Kassel, West Germany, in 1964. The following year, Chandra became the first Indian British artist exhibited at Tate Britain, in London. His work is featured in the collections of several institutions, including the National Gallery of Art in New Delhi, the Tate Gallery and Victoria and Albert Museum in London, Le Musée d'Art Moderne in Paris, the Museum of Modern Art in Berlin, among others.
Acquired directly from Walter Moos, Toronto
A Private Canadian Collection
Notes:
Indian artist Avinash Chandra studied painting at the Delhi Polytechnic, and quickly found acclaim thereafter, winning First Prize at the 1954 First National Art Exhibition of Art, in New Delhi. Despite his early success, Chandra was dissatisfied with the art world, and left India for the United Kingdom in 1956. In London he was struck by the expressionist paintings of Vincent Van Gogh and Chaim Soutine, which greatly inspired Chandra's dramatic abstract landscape and figural works. The artist developed a unique expressive painterly style of intricate interlacing forms that often straddled the abstract and representational. He soon became one of the first Indian artists to achieve widespread international recognition. Chandra was the first Indian artist to exhibit at one of the most important art events worldwide - Documenta in Kassel, West Germany, in 1964. The following year, Chandra became the first Indian British artist exhibited at Tate Britain, in London. His work is featured in the collections of several institutions, including the National Gallery of Art in New Delhi, the Tate Gallery and Victoria and Albert Museum in London, Le Musée d'Art Moderne in Paris, the Museum of Modern Art in Berlin, among others.
Most realised prices include the Buyer's Premium of 18-25%, but not the HST/GST Tax.
(*) Text and/or Image might be subject matter of Copyright. Check with Cowley Abbott auction house for permission to use.
(*) Text and/or Image might be subject matter of Copyright. Check with Cowley Abbott auction house for permission to use.