Untitled

Medium:Oil
Height:40 inch / 101.6 cm
Width:30 inch / 76.2 cm
Surface:Canvas
Style:Figurative Paintings
Dimension:W: 76.2 cm × H: 101.6 cm

This striking canvas by B. Prabha is a quintessential example of her commitment to portraying the dignity and resilience of rural Indian women.

Description

B. Prabha | Untitled | Oil on Canvas | 40 x 30 inches

This striking canvas by B. Prabha is a quintessential example of her commitment to portraying the dignity and resilience of rural Indian women. The solitary figure, rendered in elongated form and enveloped in warm, earthy tones, exudes quiet strength and introspection. Prabha’s style—marked by minimalism, stylization, and emotional depth—was revolutionary in its focus on female laborers and marginalized communities, especially at a time when few women artists were visible in the Indian modernist canon. The painting’s stark background and contemplative mood heighten its impact, transforming the subject into a symbol of endurance and grace. This work is not just a portrait—it is a social statement, a feminist gesture, and a deeply empathetic meditation on the lives often overlooked in mainstream narratives. It remains one of the most powerful expressions of Prabha’s humanist realism.

Born in Nagpur, B. Prabha became an artist at a time when not many Indian women practiced it as a profession.

Prabha studied at the Nagpur School of Art and obtained a diploma from Sir J. J. School of Art, Bombay, in 1955. A significant artist of her time, Prabha is best remembered for her magnificent portrayals in oil, of rural women and their triumph over the tribulations of their daily lives. Though Prabha ultimately settled to work in oil, she explored a range of material; her style evolved from early abstracts to strongly figurative works.

Some of her inspirations were European masters like Vincent van Gogh, Paul Gauguin, Amedeo Modigliani, and Pablo Picasso, and in the Indian context, Amrita Sher-Gil. Works of A. A. Almelkar, S. B. Palsikar and N. S. Bendre spurred her interest in classical Indian paintings—these cumulative influences are apparent in her Kashmir landscapes. She gradually evolved her own vocabulary through her individual sensibility.

Besides rural women, Prabha’s work celebrated the unsung, toiling common folk: fishermen, farmers, the urban working poor living on the edge of society. While still a student, some of her works were acquired by scientist Homi J. Bhabha. She received the first prize at the 1958 Bombay State Art Exhibition.

Prabha was married to painter-sculptor B. Vithal, also an alumnus of Sir J. J. School of Art. After his passing in 1992, she held an exhibition in his memory, titled Shraddhanjali. Prabha passed away in Nagpur in September 2001.


Shipment DetailsThis artwork will be shipped unframed, either in roll form or flat, depending on its requirements—at no additional cost.

If you’d prefer the artwork to arrive ready to hang, please get in touch with us to arrange framing and shipping at applicable charges.

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Additional information

Dimensions 31.75 × 25.4 cm
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