Bride\'s Toilet
Image source: commons.wikimedia.org

Bride's Toilet

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Support Type: Canvas
Paint Type: Oil Paint
Current Location: National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi
Location History:Gift of the artist to her sister-in-law, Viola Egan Thence by descent 1) Displayed in the exhibition 'Amrita Shergil: The Passionate Quest' at the National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi. 2) Amrita Sher-Gil Birth Centenary Celebrations organized at UNESCO, Paris, by the National Gallery of Modern Art. 3) An exhibition titled Amrita Shergil - An Artist family in the 20th Century was organized at Munich, Germany from 3.10.2006 to 10.01.2007. 4) An exhibition titled Amrita Sher-gil organized at Tate Modern, London from 18.02.2007 to 22.04.2007.

Bride’s Toilet, 1937, Amrita Sher-Gil (1913-1941). Painted during the artist’s tour of South India the same year, and it seems to carry the full, immersive weight of that experience within its pigment. These are the ochres, the deep reds, the warm umbers she saw not on European palettes, but in the fresco walls of Ajanta, in the dirt of rural lanes, in the leisurely complexes of women never painted before. The ground isn’t just decorative. It is a worked, worn amber, the color of old stone, interior shade, an afternoon room without windows. Five women settle onto the canvas against this, as if they had always belonged there and only just this now, this moment now has been seen. Slightly to the left of center the bride is seated, cross-legged and naked above the waist, her torso tilted in a three-quarter view to the right of the canvas, her dark hair pinned tight, a dot of vermillion precisely on the center of her brow. The paint of her skin is lighter than any of the others; a considered choice. This tonal contrast, the light central figure surrounded by darker attendants, is directly borrowed from the classical hierarchy of Ajanta pigment, where ancient custom takes a slightly more wistful turn in this painting. The bride reaches an open palm toward the woman seated opposite, an ambiguous gesture, neither offering nor received, held in abeyance between them: a ritual’s pause. Her expression is averted. Her face turned in. She does not engage anyone. To her left, a woman with a dark olive shirt presses her head in from behind – attendant but not yet acting, her hands held together in front of her body, her expression fixed toward the bride with the cautious neutrality of one present without intrusive agency. To her right, the most sumptuously dressed woman, wearing an embroidered choli, studded with reflective circles, red beads round her neck, a white dupatta draped over her lap, reaches toward the bride’s out-stretched hand with both hands and the same bowl. This action is part command, part service. The posture of someone who knows all the marriage-preparatory ritual protocol by heart. On the far right, the youngest, smallest of figures in dark clothes and hue, seated apart, gazing in contemplation that, it is not yet her role. On the bare floor between these bodies sit two clay urns of deep terracotta color. They glow in this earth-tone painting, the only spots of saturated pigment; round, clay, a very hot and potent Indian red – the colour of sindoor, kumkum, fire, purity and passion. They don’t simply decorate the scene. They hold what needs holding, or perhaps it’s what will be used, as central to the ceremony as the women, as concrete as the women themselves. They are handled, like the figures, with that carefulness, that compositional significance which all Sher-Gil’s objects received – no props. The paint itself has both spareness and sensuousness, forms flattened but not depleted. Figures occupy the space with minimal shadows but retain all volume, a corporeality all the more emphatic for its lack of light. This is the particular magic of Sher-Gil’s developed Indian phase: the spare, post-Impressionist handling that she developed in France fused with the static, monumental, and non-illusionistic qualities of the Ajanta frescoes, which she considered “worth more than the whole of the Renaissance.” What emerges from this collision of techniques is entirely new as Indian painting in 1937-not Bengal School mythological idealism, not academic realism, not naive folk-art, but something more complex: western oil technique for a wholly Indian soul. Its emotional power lies in the very things that are not here; in the absence of joy. This bridal scene is deliberately de-festive. There are no smiles, no speech. Yet, the ceremony proceeds and something in the posture, in the averted look, in the suspended reach, in the waiting child, makes it feel strangely distant from all conventional meaning. Sher-Gil painted this 33 years before Indian independence, during the Provincial elections. A woman’s transition from girlhood to marriage in the poverty stricken British colony of India was rarely a joyous occasion, it was considered transfer of property. Sher-Gil understood it and did not romanticize it and by doing so, it is perhaps the most daring thing an Indian woman could paint that year. The painting is a solemn record. A room of women who know what this all entails, who have performed this ritual, perhaps countless times before, holding it delicately between them without seeking to change its nature. The inner life of the Indian woman, so rarely revealed, so wholly unguarded, the focus of significant art.

Information Compiled by Jyotirmaya Samanta
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