PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN, SWITZERLAND"My time in India, from 1966 to 1969, was instrumental in my purchase of Pan Shop No. 1 by Bhupen Khakhar. I was posted to New Delhi by my company, a multi-national food group, in the role of All-India Products Manager, having worked for them in Trinidad in the Caribbean for a number of years. During my time there I worked in the great cities of Bombay, Calcutta, Madras and New Delhi, to meet and discuss with our salesforce and distributors, shop-keepers in the bazaar and sometimes with the owners of the tiniest of roadside shacks, all to try to understand what made the Indian market-place tick. Not long after my arrival, I needed to find a home to live in. After a lot of chasing around I eventually found an elegant-newly built house in the Greater Kailash quarter of New Delhi. But I needed to furnish it, and had lots of white wall-space to fill which called for some paintings and rugs to make it into a home.That, in a nutshell, is how I found my way to Kunika Chemould Art Centre in New Delhi, one Saturday afternoon in early 1966, seeking something special to offset the white space. That soon changed, however, when a magnetic collage in robust red stopped me in my tracks. A charming lady from the gallery started to explain what it was all about. Pan Shop No. 1, she said, was painted by Bhupen Khakhar and represented the artist’s desire to portray the life and work of the ordinary people of India, through the paan wallah, the man who makes and sells the paan on the street.The paan wallah, she continued, often uses an open suitcase for his shop, sitting by the side of the road, selling paan and things like combs and mirrors, and pictures of Hindu gods. In this collage, Khakhar has also included a photo of the much revered second Prime Minister of India, Lal Bahadur Shastri, in his Gandhi cap. The work also has three mirrors on which the artist has written messages in Gujarati; one humourously reads ‘cash today, for credit come tomorrow’. Hearing all of this, I decided immediately to buy Pan Shop No. 1 as I could see it would look wonderful on my walls, and there was a real social and political story woven into its fabric, which projected ‘India’ as I knew it.In my opinion, Pan Shop No. 1 is an amazing early work by Bhupen Khakhar which highlights the role of the paan shop in everyday Indian life with a sense of humour and a sociopolitical touch. It also dramatises the red saliva spitting action of paan users with its large red splodges, etched with white paint, to make the work a powerful mélange and magnetic focal point. For 50 years, Pan Shop No. 1 has given me great enjoyment, renewing my memories of India and the smiles on the faces of its working people, and I hope it offers the buyer the same joy." - J.W.
BHUPEN KHAKHAR (1934-2003)

Pan Shop No. 1

成交價 英鎊 161,000
估價
英鎊 120,000 – 英鎊 180,000
估價不包括買家酬金。成交總額為下鎚價加以買家酬金及扣除可適用之費用。
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BHUPEN KHAKHAR (1934-2003)

Pan Shop No. 1

成交價 英鎊 161,000
拍品終止拍賣: 2017年5月25日
成交價 英鎊 161,000
拍品終止拍賣: 2017年5月25日
細節
BHUPEN KHAKHAR (1934-2003)
Pan Shop No. 1
titled and inscribed 'Pan Shop No 1 / Rs 300/-'; further inscribed and titled 'Bhupen Khakhar / Pan Shop No 1' on Gallery Chemould label (on the reverse)
oil and collage on canvas
33 x 33 in. (83.8 x 83.8 cm.)
Executed circa 1965
來源
Kunika Chemould Art Centre, New Delhi
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1966
注意事項
These lots have been imported from outside the EU for sale using a Temporary Import regime. Import VAT is payable (at 5%) on the Hammer price. VAT is also payable (at 20%) on the buyer’s Premium on a VAT inclusive basis. When a buyer of such a lot has registered an EU address but wishes to export the lot or complete the import into another EU country, he must advise Christie's immediately after the auction.

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