Page 126 - September 20th 2021, Indian and Himalayan Art Christie's NYC
P. 126

456
                  A PAINTING OF GANESHA ENTHRONED WITH
                  RIDDHI AND SIDDHI
                  INDIA, PAHARI HILLS, MANDI, SCHOOL OF SAJNU,
                  CIRCA 1810-1820
                  Folio 15º x 20√ in. (38.7 x 53 cm.)
                  Image 13√ x 19Ω in. (35.2 x 49.5 cm.)
                  $20,000-30,000
                  PROVENANCE:
                  Royal Mandi collection, by repute.
                  Private collection, Germany, 1969, by repute.








                  This large painting depicts a delightfully enthroned
                  Ganesha flanked by Riddhi and Siddhi, goddesses
                  personifying the concepts of prosperity and spirituality.
                  Ganesha sits casually on a divan set in the midst of a
                  palace courtyard and holds an axe and sword in two
                  of his hands, while using his other two hands and his
                  trunk to select treats from one of his consorts. Two rats,
                  the  vahana  of Ganesha, crouch expectantly behind the
                  women, waiting for their turn to indulge in the sweets.
                  The painting likely accompanied a large format series as
                  a dedicatory frontispiece. When H. Shastri first published
                  Sajnu’s similarly sized  Hamir  Hath  series, he noted a
                  benedictory painting of Ganesha with Riddhi and Siddhi
                  as  the  opening image;  see  lot  457  for a  discussion  on
                  the series. Compare the present lot with another Pahari
                  frontispiece of Ganesha sold at Christie’s New York, 23
                  July 2020, lot 12 for $37,500.
   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   129   130   131