Untitled, Mixed Media on Paper

Medium:Mixed Media
Height:4.5 inch / 11.4 cm
Width:9 inch / 22.9 cm
Dimension:W: 22.9 cm × H: 11.4 cm

This captivating artwork by Sakti Burman, created in 2012 using mixed media on paper, reflects the artist’s signature blend of fantasy and everyday observation. Measuring 4.5 x 9 inches, the piece features a group of figures rendered in delicate, textural pen work, softened by subtle washes of color.

Description

Sakti Burman | Untitled | Mixed Media on Paper | 4.5 x 9 inches | 2012

This captivating artwork by Sakti Burman, created in 2012 using mixed media on paper, reflects the artist’s signature blend of fantasy and everyday observation. Measuring 4.5 x 9 inches, the piece features a group of figures rendered in delicate, textural pen work, softened by subtle washes of color. A mythic atmosphere pervades the scene: a figure on horseback appears alongside others standing or observing, each imbued with a quiet, introspective presence. The interplay between human and mythical elements evokes Burman’s characteristic dreamlike narrative world, where imagination and memory intertwine. The use of cross-hatching and muted tones adds depth and emotion, while the composition—anchored by the juxtaposition of figures and space—invites viewers into an intimate, timeless moment filled with poetic mystery.

Like most other Indian artists who studied or lived in the French capital, Paris-based Burman’s works blend European and Indian imagery.

Born in Calcutta, Sakti Burman studied at the city’s Government College of Arts and Crafts, and later at École Nationale des Beaux-Arts, Paris.

Pointillism and a marbling effect are unique characteristics of Burman’s art. He discovered marbling accidentally when water spilled on an oil canvas caused a filigreed dispersal of oil, an effect he has been painstakingly recreating ever since. Incredibly, he brought the same effect to his prints, made in his initial years, achieving the marbling on the surface of the medium — stone or wood or metal — through a labourious technical process in close collaboration with his printmakers, incidentally, also employed by Pablo Picasso and Marc Chagall. In 1958, exposure to Italian Renaissance frescos by Giotto, Piero della Francesca and Simone Martini inspired Burman to incorporate the monumentality and texture of their works in his oeuvre.

India continues to inhabit his work in the form of characters and episodes from mythology or popular culture, often alluding to Ajanta cave paintings. Birds and animals, dream imagery and mythological figures such as Shiva’s son Kartikeya, referenced as the peacock-riding man, are frequent occurrences, making his work appear surrealist. For a long time now, he has foregrounded the figurative, which had receded from the art scenario in recent decades.

Burman is married to French artist Maite Deiteil and spends his time between his homes and studios in Paris and New Delhi.


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 66.04 × 50.8 cm
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