Raja Ravi Varma's 'Tilottama' fetches over Rs 5 crore at Sotheby's sale

Raja Ravi Varma's 'Tilottama' fetches over Rs 5 crore at Sotheby's sale

Sotheby's said the whopping price for the painting was "achieved following several minutes of bidding between three telephone bidders".

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PC: India TodayPC: India Today
PTI
  • Mar 22, 2018,
  • Updated Mar 22, 2018 6:57 PM IST

Raja Ravi Varma's untitled painting of Tilottama was sold for Rs 5.17 crore at Sotheby's New York sale of Modern and Contemporary South Asian Art, fetching more than its upper estimate of Rs 3.90 crore. The painting, among a handful of Raja Ravi Varma works to have appeared at international auctions, features a celestial nymph from Hindu mythology, who embodies the "nearly perfect being".

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Varma eschewed Western subject matter and often illustrated myriad stories from Vedic mythology as well as the Ramayana and Mahabharata. "The challenge for Varma lay in mediating images, which were life-like in appearance and often Western, neo-classical in inspiration to make them viable as Indian cultural symbols," according to the auction house's website.

According to the Hindu mythology, Tilottama, was created at Brahma's request to destroy two demon brothers Sunda and Upasunda, who could not be killed by anyone except themselves. Legend has it that the two brothers were so captivated by her beauty, that they fought over her and ended up killing each other.

Varma's painting that portrays the apsara's descent from the skies to earth is said to be inspired from Venus who was the embodiment of female beauty. The artist strove to impart the extreme desirability that led to the demon brothers' downfall.

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Her composed gaze, voluptuous curves and the radiance of her complexion project a sense of vitality and fertility reminiscent of the early representation of Goddess figures in Central Indian sculpture.

Sotheby's said the whopping price for the painting was "achieved following several minutes of bidding between three telephone bidders".

Raja Ravi Varma's untitled painting of Tilottama was sold for Rs 5.17 crore at Sotheby's New York sale of Modern and Contemporary South Asian Art, fetching more than its upper estimate of Rs 3.90 crore. The painting, among a handful of Raja Ravi Varma works to have appeared at international auctions, features a celestial nymph from Hindu mythology, who embodies the "nearly perfect being".

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Varma eschewed Western subject matter and often illustrated myriad stories from Vedic mythology as well as the Ramayana and Mahabharata. "The challenge for Varma lay in mediating images, which were life-like in appearance and often Western, neo-classical in inspiration to make them viable as Indian cultural symbols," according to the auction house's website.

According to the Hindu mythology, Tilottama, was created at Brahma's request to destroy two demon brothers Sunda and Upasunda, who could not be killed by anyone except themselves. Legend has it that the two brothers were so captivated by her beauty, that they fought over her and ended up killing each other.

Varma's painting that portrays the apsara's descent from the skies to earth is said to be inspired from Venus who was the embodiment of female beauty. The artist strove to impart the extreme desirability that led to the demon brothers' downfall.

Advertisement

Her composed gaze, voluptuous curves and the radiance of her complexion project a sense of vitality and fertility reminiscent of the early representation of Goddess figures in Central Indian sculpture.

Sotheby's said the whopping price for the painting was "achieved following several minutes of bidding between three telephone bidders".

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