Thursday, 14 April 2016

12 APR 1924-28 MAR 2002 FRANCIS NEWTON SOUZA

Francis Newton Souza

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Francis Newton Souza
Indian artist of Goan origin, Francis Newton Souza.jpg
Balzac Etcetera (1971)
NationalityIndian
Known forPaintingDrawing
Francis Newton Souza (12 April 1924 – 28 March 2002), commonly referred to as F. N. Souza, was an Indian artist. He was a founding member of the Progressive Artists' Group of Bombay, and was the first post-independence Indian artist to achieve high recognition in the West. Souza's style exhibited both low-life and high energy.

Early life and education[edit]

Francis Newton Souza was born to Roman Catholic parents in the village of SaligaoGoa. He lost his father at the tender age of three months old to an attack of smallpox. Having survived, although scarred for life, his grateful mother named him Francis, after the patron saint of Goa St Francis Xavier.[1] His mother was a seamstress. One of Souza's better known paintings depicts a sewing machine.[citation needed]
He attended St. Xavier's College in Bombay, being expelled for drawing graffiti in a toilet which he claimed he was correcting, but the priests did not accept his claims.[citation needed]
Souza studied at the Sir J. J. School of Art in Bombay but was expelled in 1945 for his support for the Quit India Movement.[citation needed]
Souza joined the Communist Party of India in 1947.[1]

Career[edit]

In 1947 he was a founding member of the Bombay Progressive Artists' Group which encouraged Indian artists to participate in the international avant-garde.[1]
In 1948 Souza's paintings were shown at an exhibition in London's Burlington House . In 1949 Souza moved to London, where initially struggling to make an impact as an artist, he worked as a journalist. The Institute of Contemporary Arts included his work in a 1954 exhibition. His success as an artist took off following the publication in 1955 of his autobiographical essay Nirvana of a Maggot in Stephen Spender's Encounter magazine. Spender introduced Souza to the art dealer Victor Musgrave, the owner of Gallery One. Souza's 1955 exhibit was a sold out, leading to ongoing success[1]
In 1959 Souza published Words and Lines.[2]
Souza's career developed steadily, and he participated in several shows, receiving positive reviews from John Berger. His style was, as Berger pointed out,[3] deliberately eclectic: essentially Expressionist in character, but also drawing on the post-war Art Brut movement and elements of British Neo-romanticism. His work was often highly erotic. According to art historian Yashodhara Dalmia,
At the heart of Souza's creativity was the belief that society's destructive aspects shouldn't be suppressed, they should be aired and confronted. Be it the hypocrisy of the church, the corruption of the upper classes or the repression of sexuality in a country that has a Khajuraho, he was uncovering the underbelly of existence.[4]
From 1967 he settled in New York, only to return to India shortly before his death. Souza was buried in Sewri cemetery in Mumbai, in a quiet funeral on 30 March 2002.

Reputation[edit]

A Souza.
In recent years Souza's Paintings have been sold for over a million dollars.[5] In 2008, his painting "Birth" (1955) set a world auction record for the most expensive Indian painting sold till then by selling for US$2.5 million (Rs 11.3 crore) at a Christie's auction. In 2015, the painting "Birth" was resold at Christie's in New York, fetching more than US$4 million.[6]
In June 2010 Christie's held an auction of over 140 lots from the Souza Estate. Many of Souza's works fetched very high prices, some several times Christie's estimates.[7]
A purported 1963 painting by Souza appeared on the BBC Antiques Road Show in February 2009.
Neelam Raaj wrote in The Times of India:
With a few slashing lines and a raw, expressive energy, Francis Newton Souza stripped away all subterfuge. Be it the sluts or the suits, the seamy side of life or the steamy, the gnomish, pox-scarred boy from Goa who went on to become one of the first Indian artists to be feted in the salons of Europe, laid it bare.[4]

Public collections[edit]

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      Francis Newton Souza
      Artist
      Francis Newton Souza, commonly referred to as F. N. Souza, was an Indian artist. He was a founding member of the Progressive Artists' Group of Bombay, and was the first post-independence Indian artist to achieve high recognition in the West. Wikipedia
      BornApril 12, 1924, Saligao
      DiedMarch 28, 2002, Mumbai
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