This portrait of the lady, lost in old memories while reading a letter, portrayed as leaning on a table, a piece of furniture in the 19th century European style, endowed with such finish, sophistication, magnificence and perfect execution, takes the viewing eye to the heights of grandeur to which Raja Ravi Verma led the art of Indian portrait. It also takes the viewing eye to one of his best known portraits on the same theme, to which it is an equivalent in many aspects : in modeling of the figure, rendering figure’s emotional quality, colours’ effectiveness, ease with which the artist has captured his subject’s posture, in creating the ambience and in attaining the same aesthetic levels. As effective is figure’s iconographic perception. Her round face has been brilliantly balanced with a prominent forehead, deep large eyes, sharp nose with a small ring inlaid with a ruby, receding chin which a patch of shaded light highlights, and her well defined fine lips. There is hardly anything extraordinary in her face, it is however fascinatingly beautiful.
Rendered in oil pursuing the tradition of Raja Ravi Verma this painting portrays a lady in her advanced youth seated on a chair besides a table with a beautiful tablecloth laid over it. She holds in her left hand a letter and her eyes are directed to it but in them descend some old memory, not the letter’s contents. Her realistically rendered image is unique in vigour and effectiveness. Whatever of it might reveal in a single figure, in her wear, her traditional sari covering her head and a part of it held on her left hand, and her blouse conceived with graceful neck opening, her glass bangles, ‘bindi’ – small round dot on her forehead, painted palms and fingers, and jewellery, especially the pendant around the parting of her hair, besides a mind as reflects in the demeanour of her face, are forms of a culture that defines India and her essential life-style. In its realism, perspectives, dynamism, light and shade effects and breadth of canvas the painting is simple unique.
This description by Prof. P.C. Jain and Dr. Daljeet. Prof. Jain specializes on the aesthetics of literature and is the author of numerous books on Indian art and culture. Dr. Daljeet is the curator of the Miniature Painting Gallery, National Museum, New Delhi. They have both collaborated together on a number of books.
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