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Two women occupy a tall, narrow composition with a striking contrast of poses and garments. At left, a seated woman with deep brown skin, strong red lips, and large almond eyes faces forward with a steady gaze. She is wrapped in layered blue-green drapery and head covering. One hand extends across her lap, fingers holding her knee. At right, a second woman stands in profile, head bowed, wearing a luminous white veil and robe that nearly merges with the pale wall behind her. Her hand rises to her chin in a thoughtful gesture. A broad, simplified green plant enters from the upper left. Hungarian-Indian artist Amrita Sher-Gil uses muted creams, gray-greens, blue, and warm ochre, with soft brushwork and flattened space, to create stillness and emotional gravity.

These women are not presented as decorative types. They are rendered as distinct presences with one meeting the viewer’s gaze, one turning inward. The composition stages a quiet emotional dialogue through contrasts like seated/standing, frontal/profile, blue/white, and engagement/reflection. The broad empty wall becomes active space, heightening silence and psychological weight. Sher-Gil’s handling of form reflects her synthesis of European modernist structure and an Indian-centered figural vision. The result is intimate yet unsentimental, with dignity carried through posture, stillness, and the careful modeling of hands and faces.

Painted in the mid-1930s, this work belongs to the crucial period after Sher-Gil’s return from Paris, when she shifted toward subjects in India and developed the earthier palette and monumental figuration that define her mature style. Born in Budapest to a Hungarian mother and Sikh father, she was in her twenties yet already a formidable painter, using portrait and genre imagery to challenge idealized or colonial ways of seeing. In works like this, women are neither background figures nor symbols alone. They are complex subjects shaped by mood, social reality, and self-possession.

Two women occupy a tall, narrow composition with a striking contrast of poses and garments. At left, a seated woman with deep brown skin, strong red lips, and large almond eyes faces forward with a steady gaze. She is wrapped in layered blue-green drapery and head covering. One hand extends across her lap, fingers holding her knee. At right, a second woman stands in profile, head bowed, wearing a luminous white veil and robe that nearly merges with the pale wall behind her. Her hand rises to her chin in a thoughtful gesture. A broad, simplified green plant enters from the upper left. Hungarian-Indian artist Amrita Sher-Gil uses muted creams, gray-greens, blue, and warm ochre, with soft brushwork and flattened space, to create stillness and emotional gravity. These women are not presented as decorative types. They are rendered as distinct presences with one meeting the viewer’s gaze, one turning inward. The composition stages a quiet emotional dialogue through contrasts like seated/standing, frontal/profile, blue/white, and engagement/reflection. The broad empty wall becomes active space, heightening silence and psychological weight. Sher-Gil’s handling of form reflects her synthesis of European modernist structure and an Indian-centered figural vision. The result is intimate yet unsentimental, with dignity carried through posture, stillness, and the careful modeling of hands and faces. Painted in the mid-1930s, this work belongs to the crucial period after Sher-Gil’s return from Paris, when she shifted toward subjects in India and developed the earthier palette and monumental figuration that define her mature style. Born in Budapest to a Hungarian mother and Sikh father, she was in her twenties yet already a formidable painter, using portrait and genre imagery to challenge idealized or colonial ways of seeing. In works like this, women are neither background figures nor symbols alone. They are complex subjects shaped by mood, social reality, and self-possession.

“Two Women” by अमृता शेर-गिल Amrita Sher-Gil (Hungarian-Indian) - Oil on canvas on board / c. 1935-1936 - National Gallery of Modern Art (New Delhi, India) #WomenInArt #WomensArt #WomanArtist #WomenArtists #AmritaSherGil #Sher-Gil #अमृताशेरगिल #SherGil #AmritaSher-Gil #NGMA #artText #IndianArtist #IndianArt

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Painted around 1937, after artist Amrita Sher-Gil had returned from Paris and immersed herself in India, this self-portrait belongs to the years she moved between Shimla in the Himalayan foothills, her family estate in rural Uttar Pradesh, and long journeys through South India. Trained in European modernism yet hungry for an idiom rooted in the subcontinent, she studied Ajanta murals, Mughal and Pahari painting, and village life, insisting that “India belongs only to me” as a painterly destiny. Here she casts herself as a modern Indian woman, wrapped in a sari yet bare-armed, with the directness of a city intellectual rather than a conventional bride.

The young woman with medium-brown skin sits turned slightly to our left, her large dark eyes steadily peer out with a look of knowledge. Her beautiful face is framed by long black hair and a sheer, midnight-blue veil that drops over her shoulders, a tiny bindi centering her brow. She wears a sleeveless indigo blue sari that pools into broad, textured strokes around her lap. One bare arm angles across her body, the other forearm rests along her knee, her hands rendered as soft, sketchy planes. Against a pale, almost unfinished background, the saturated blues and her luminous full pink mouth pull us toward her interior life rather than surface detail.

The loose, unfinished hands and swathes of blue resist salon polish, asserting process and doubt, while her unsmiling gaze confronts both us and the male-dominated art world she was determined to enter. Within just a few years she would paint her great village scenes and die suddenly at twenty-eight (in 1941), yet works like this helped secure her place as a pioneer of modern Indian art and a touchstone for later women artists who use self-portraiture to claim complex, fearless identities.

Painted around 1937, after artist Amrita Sher-Gil had returned from Paris and immersed herself in India, this self-portrait belongs to the years she moved between Shimla in the Himalayan foothills, her family estate in rural Uttar Pradesh, and long journeys through South India. Trained in European modernism yet hungry for an idiom rooted in the subcontinent, she studied Ajanta murals, Mughal and Pahari painting, and village life, insisting that “India belongs only to me” as a painterly destiny. Here she casts herself as a modern Indian woman, wrapped in a sari yet bare-armed, with the directness of a city intellectual rather than a conventional bride. The young woman with medium-brown skin sits turned slightly to our left, her large dark eyes steadily peer out with a look of knowledge. Her beautiful face is framed by long black hair and a sheer, midnight-blue veil that drops over her shoulders, a tiny bindi centering her brow. She wears a sleeveless indigo blue sari that pools into broad, textured strokes around her lap. One bare arm angles across her body, the other forearm rests along her knee, her hands rendered as soft, sketchy planes. Against a pale, almost unfinished background, the saturated blues and her luminous full pink mouth pull us toward her interior life rather than surface detail. The loose, unfinished hands and swathes of blue resist salon polish, asserting process and doubt, while her unsmiling gaze confronts both us and the male-dominated art world she was determined to enter. Within just a few years she would paint her great village scenes and die suddenly at twenty-eight (in 1941), yet works like this helped secure her place as a pioneer of modern Indian art and a touchstone for later women artists who use self-portraiture to claim complex, fearless identities.

"Self-Portrait in Blue Sari" by Amrita Sher-Gil (Hungarian-Indian) - Oil on canvas / c 1937 - Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, New Delhi, India #WomenInArt #AmritaSherGil #SherGil #KNMA #KiranNadarMuseumOfArt #SelfPortrait #Sher-Gil #artText #IndianArt #AmritaSher-Gil #WomensArt #WomanArtist #WomenArtists

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This painting is from a series of self portraits in the early 1930's while Hungarian-Indian artist Amrita Sher-Gil (sometimes spelled Shergil) was still a student at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in France that represented her many moods. 

She sits comfortably, with her right hand prominently on her hip, looking directly at us in style that is expressive and somewhat impressionistic. The artist's brushstrokes are visible, and the colors are rich and slightly muted, predominantly warm earth tones with hints of purple and blue in her clothing and headwear. She has positioned herself slightly off-center, creating a send of intimacy which draws us into eye contact with her.

She wears a dark reddish-brown, collared dress and matching turban in similar tones of deep maroon. A lavender beaded necklace is around her neck is one of the color accents. Her expression is serious and somewhat reserved as shadows cover part of her light brown facial features highlighted by bright red full lips, thick eyebrows, straight bulb nose, and rosy cheeks.

The painting is in the collection of the National Gallery of Modern Art in New Delhi, India, but has been part of exhibitions over the past 20 years in Munich, Paris, and London which highlighted Sher-gil's trailblazing role and inspirational impact she had during her brief life that ended far too soon at the age of 28.

Sher-gil has been called "one of the greatest avant-garde women artists of the early 20th century" and a "pioneer" in modern Indian art. Drawn to painting from an early age, Sher-Gil started getting formal lessons in art, at the age of 8 and first gained recognition at the age of 19, for her oil painting titled "Young Girls."

She traveled throughout her life, drawing heavily from precolonial Indian art styles and its current culture. Sher-Gil's legacy stands on a level with that of pioneers from the Bengal Renaissance -- although few acknowledged her work when she was alive.

This painting is from a series of self portraits in the early 1930's while Hungarian-Indian artist Amrita Sher-Gil (sometimes spelled Shergil) was still a student at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in France that represented her many moods. She sits comfortably, with her right hand prominently on her hip, looking directly at us in style that is expressive and somewhat impressionistic. The artist's brushstrokes are visible, and the colors are rich and slightly muted, predominantly warm earth tones with hints of purple and blue in her clothing and headwear. She has positioned herself slightly off-center, creating a send of intimacy which draws us into eye contact with her. She wears a dark reddish-brown, collared dress and matching turban in similar tones of deep maroon. A lavender beaded necklace is around her neck is one of the color accents. Her expression is serious and somewhat reserved as shadows cover part of her light brown facial features highlighted by bright red full lips, thick eyebrows, straight bulb nose, and rosy cheeks. The painting is in the collection of the National Gallery of Modern Art in New Delhi, India, but has been part of exhibitions over the past 20 years in Munich, Paris, and London which highlighted Sher-gil's trailblazing role and inspirational impact she had during her brief life that ended far too soon at the age of 28. Sher-gil has been called "one of the greatest avant-garde women artists of the early 20th century" and a "pioneer" in modern Indian art. Drawn to painting from an early age, Sher-Gil started getting formal lessons in art, at the age of 8 and first gained recognition at the age of 19, for her oil painting titled "Young Girls." She traveled throughout her life, drawing heavily from precolonial Indian art styles and its current culture. Sher-Gil's legacy stands on a level with that of pioneers from the Bengal Renaissance -- although few acknowledged her work when she was alive.

Self Portrait by Amrita Sher-Gil (Hungarian-Indian) - Oil on canvas / 1930 - National Gallery of Modern Art (New Delhi, India) #WomenInArt #WomanArtist #Art #FemaleArtist #OilPainting #WomensArt #PortraitofaWoman #artwork #AmritaSher-Gil #Sher-Gil #SherGil #NationalGalleryofModernArt #SelfPortrait

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