Roseberys’
Antiquities, Islamic and Indian Arts (Friday 25 October) proved the strength of the market for Indian Modernist painters, with a work by K.C.S Paniker (lot 378) selling over 60 times its low estimate. In a heated international bidding battle between phone, online and room bidders, a buyer from India triumphed, with the work realising a price of £78,240. A further work by the artist realised a price of £26,240 over a low estimate of £700. Conservative estimates were set to match the rapid demand for Modern and Contemporary Indian art, appealing to both established collectors and those looking to start or expand their collections.
Kovalezhi Cheerampathoor Sankara Paniker (1911-1977), a towering figure in the Madras Art Movement, is renowned for his abstract and metaphysical paintings. His shift from Western aesthetics to regional pictorial traditions firmly established him as a pivotal figure in post-colonial Modernism. The works sold, dated 1953 and 1956, exemplify a transitional moment from figuration towards the abstraction that would define his mature career. The sale also included high-calibre antiquities from the collection of Philip Hewat-Jaboor, with three works of Roman stone masonry rounding out the sale highlights.