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Amrita Shergill

Personal Profile

Amrita Shergill
  • Date of Birth:
    January 30, 1913
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Aquarius
  • Place of Birth:
    Budapest, Hungary
  • Place of Death:
    Lahore, British India
  • Date of Death:
    December 5, 1941
  • Sex:
    Female
  • Nationality:
    Indian
  • Education:
    Art School at Florence, Italy

Family

Amrita Shergill
  • Father:
    Umrao Singh Sher-Gil Majithia
  • Mother:
    Marie Antoinette Gottesmann
  • Sister:
    Indira Sundaram
  • Spouse:
    Dr. Victor Egan

Career

Amrita Shergill

Trivia

Amrita Shergill
  • Besides remaining an inspiration to many a contemporary Indian artists, in 1993, she also became the inspiration behind, the famous Urdu play, by Javed Siddiqi, 'Tumhari Amrita', starring Shabana Azmi and Farooq Shaikh.
  • Most of them are housed in the National Gallery of Modern Art in New Delhi .
  • The Government of India has declared her works as National Art Treasures.
  • In September 1941, the couple moved to Lahore, then in undivided India, and a major cultural and artistic centre.
  • Married her Hungarian first cousin, Dr. Victor Egan in 1938, and moved with him to India, to stay at her paternal family's home in Saraya, Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh.
  • In 1921 her family moved to Summer Hill, Shimla in India, and soon began learning piano and violin.
  • At sixteen, Sher-Gil sailed to Europe with her mother to train as a painter at Paris, first at the Grande Chaumiere under Pierre Vaillant and later at École des Beaux-Arts (1930-34).
  • Was the niece of Indologist Ervin Baktay.
  • Her younger sister was Indira Sundaram (née Sher-Gil), mother of the contemporary artist Vivan Sundaram.
  • Was daughter of Umrao Singh Sher-Gil Majithia, a Sikh aristocrat and also a scholar in Sanskrit and Persian, and Marie Antoinette Gottesmann, a Jewish Opera singer from Hungary.

Biography

Amrita Shergill
Last Updated: Tuesday, June 30, 2009

One of the most promising Indian artists of the pre-colonial era; youngest ever and the only Asian to be elected as Associate of the Grand Salon in Paris. Amrita Shergill was a renowned Indian painter. She was one of the most charismatic and promising Indian artists of the pre-colonial era. Most of her paintings reflect vividly her love for the country and more importantly her response to the life of its people.

In Italy Amrita was enrolled at Santa Anunciata, a Roman Catholic institution. Amrita did not like the strict discipline of the Catholic school but on the flip side she was exposed to the works of the Italian masters and this further fanned her interest in painting. In 1927, Amrita Shergil returned to India and began taking lessons in painting under Ervin Backlay. But Ervin’s insistence that Amrita should copy real life models exactly as she saw them irked Amrita and thus her painting stint under Ervin Backlay was short lived.

In 1929, at the age of sixteen, Amrita Shergil sailed to France to study Art. She took a degree in Fine Arts from the Ecole des Beaux Arts, Paris. She also learnt to speak and write French. It was in France that she started painting seriously. The Torso, one of her early paintings was a masterly study of a nude which stood out for its cleverness of drawing and bold modeling. In 1933, Amrita completed Young Girls. Critics and Art enthusiasts were so impressed by Young Girls that Amrita Shergill was elected as Associate of the Grand Salon in Paris. Amrita was the youngest ever and the only Asian to be honored thus.

In 1934, Amrita Shergill returned to India and evolved her own distinct style which, according to her, was fundamentally Indian in subject, spirit, and technical expression. Now the subject of his paintings were the poor, the villagers and beggars. In 1937, Amrita Shergill went on a tour of South India. This gave her the opportunity to achieve the simplicity she always wanted in her paintings.

In 1938, Amrita Shergill went to Hungary and married her cousin Victor Egan much to the opposition of her parents. She married purely for security reasons as she felt that she was essentially weak and needed someone to take care of her. In 1939, Amrita Shergill returned back to India and started painting again. After her return her health deteriorated and she died on December 6, 1941.

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