Indian painter, late 19th to early 20th century, watercolour and works on paper
Abanindranath Tagore
Abanindranath Tagore (1871–1951) was a Bengali painter and a central figure in the Bengal School of Art. He worked primarily in watercolour and wash, drawing on Mughal miniature tradition alongside Japanese influences.
If you have a work attributed to Abanindranath Tagore, contact: india@privatkunst.ch
Privatkunst.ch grew from a personal interest in works that carry a history. There is always more behind a work of art than first appears — and most stories are not yet fully told.
Many objects in private hands were never properly assessed — because no one with the right knowledge looked at them. That has changed. Open research archives, digitised auction catalogues, and image analysis now make it possible to understand a work in new ways and with a depth of information that simply did not exist before. A work rarely stands alone. And it carries its history within it — if you know how to read it.
If you are interested in how archives, reference sources and new technologies are contributing to the assessment of art, see the article here → — currently only in German.
For an overview of Indian art — modern, contemporary, and the recognition women artists are finally receiving — read here →
See also: Anju Dodiya · Subodh Gupta · Gulam Rasool Santosh · Suhas Roy