Spotlight: Indore - The Project of a Modern Vision, 1929-35
India鈥檚 greatest collector of the avant-garde of the 20th century, Yeshwant Rao II Holkar, Maharaja of Indore attracted the great minds of his day. He was educated at Oxford and travelled to Paris and New York, where he met the most discerning dealers, artists and designers of his time. His sophisticated taste was backed with great intuition and a keen eye for the extraordinary.
Manik Bagh, his palace in Indore, is perhaps the greatest testament to this unique figure in Indian culture. Designed by the German architect Eckart Muthesius, it was filled with some of the best examples of modern art and design of its time, including sculptures by Constantin Brancusi and design pieces by Muthesius, 脡mile-Jacques Ruhlmann and Eileen Gray. For the palace interior, the architect collected examples by European masters such as Marcel Breuer, Le Corbusier, Charlotte Perriand, and Emile-Jacques Ruhlmann in addition to his own work. Manik Bagh was completed after several years, emerging as a locus of design at the transitional moment when the sumptuous surface decoration that typified the 1920s was being propelled toward simple, functional forms made of industrial materials as exemplified by the Bauhaus movement. Particularly avant-garde for India, the grand yet intimate palace, was a landmark of burgeoning modernism.
Between 1929 and 1933, while in Paris, the Maharaja of Indore commissioned two portraits of himself, and two of his wife, the Maharani Shrimant Akhand Sahib Soubhagyavati Sanyogita Bai Holkar. from one of the pioneers of Art Deco, the French artist Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). De Monvel was renowned for his etchings and oil paintings, in which he combined a stylised use of line and colour with a modern sense of composition. His portraits became the iconic representations of the distinguished society of his time, with the sitters being depicted in stylish poses and beautiful attire. The artist had been recommended to the Maharaja by Henry-Pierre Roch茅, the French author who was also one of the most important art dealers of the time.
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India鈥檚 greatest collector of the avant-garde of the 20th century, Yeshwant Rao II Holkar, Maharaja of Indore attracted the great minds of his day. He was educated at Oxford and travelled to Paris and New York, where he met the most discerning dealers, artists and designers of his time. His sophisticated taste was backed with great intuition and a keen eye for the extraordinary.
Manik Bagh, his palace in Indore, is perhaps the greatest testament to this unique figure in Indian culture. Designed by the German architect Eckart Muthesius, it was filled with some of the best examples of modern art and design of its time, including sculptures by Constantin Brancusi and design pieces by Muthesius, 脡mile-Jacques Ruhlmann and Eileen Gray. For the palace interior, the architect collected examples by European masters such as Marcel Breuer, Le Corbusier, Charlotte Perriand, and Emile-Jacques Ruhlmann in addition to his own work. Manik Bagh was completed after several years, emerging as a locus of design at the transitional moment when the sumptuous surface decoration that typified the 1920s was being propelled toward simple, functional forms made of industrial materials as exemplified by the Bauhaus movement. Particularly avant-garde for India, the grand yet intimate palace, was a landmark of burgeoning modernism.
Between 1929 and 1933, while in Paris, the Maharaja of Indore commissioned two portraits of himself, and two of his wife, the Maharani Shrimant Akhand Sahib Soubhagyavati Sanyogita Bai Holkar. from one of the pioneers of Art Deco, the French artist Bernard Boutet de Monvel (1881-1949). De Monvel was renowned for his etchings and oil paintings, in which he combined a stylised use of line and colour with a modern sense of composition. His portraits became the iconic representations of the distinguished society of his time, with the sitters being depicted in stylish poses and beautiful attire. The artist had been recommended to the Maharaja by Henry-Pierre Roch茅, the French author who was also one of the most important art dealers of the time.