The girl holding the lamp in the celebrated painting `Glow of Hope', also known as the 'Woman With the Lamp', died at 102. Gita Uplekar died at her daughter's house in Kolhapur in western Maharashtra on Tuesday evening after a brief illness, family sources said.
The painting, a watercolour masterpiece by S.L. Haldankar, is now housed in the Jaychamarajendra Art Gallery at the Jaganmohan Palace in Mysuru, Karnataka. It is one of the most prized possessions as well as a major attraction at the gallery.
It was painted in 1945-46, almost seven decades ago, but yet holds the same amount of fascination for art lovers all over the country as then.
Though the masterpiece is Haldankar's creation, it has been wrongly attributed to legendary painter Raja Ravi Verma.
The girl in the painting was Gita Uplekar, Haldankar's third daughter. She was staying at Kolhapur since the 1940s after her marriage to jeweller Krishnakant Uplekar.
The last rites were performed at 11pm Tuesday, said Raja Uplekar, Gita's nephew.
She is survived by two daughters and a son and was staying in the house of the daughter who lives in the US, he said.
"I was 12 and lighting the Diwali diya when Bhau (her father Haldankar) saw me and asked me to pose for the sketch," Gita had said at an event in Kolhapur to mark her turning 100.
The painting was completed in three days, she had said.
Raja Uplekar had said some years ago, a buyer from France was ready to buy the painting for Rs 8 crore, but the Mysuru gallery did not part with the portrait, which was bought from Haldankar for Rs 300.
When the painting was being done, she had to hold her pose for over three hours continuously, Gita Uplekar had said. There is an interesting story about how the idea for this iconic painting was conceived. During one Diwali, Haldankar saw his daughter in a beautiful sari with a candle and her hand woven around the flame to prevent the wind from blowing it out. The rays of the candle radiated from the gap within her fingers and it also illuminated her face.
(Source: The Week)
The painting, a watercolour masterpiece by S.L. Haldankar, is now housed in the Jaychamarajendra Art Gallery at the Jaganmohan Palace in Mysuru, Karnataka. It is one of the most prized possessions as well as a major attraction at the gallery.
It was painted in 1945-46, almost seven decades ago, but yet holds the same amount of fascination for art lovers all over the country as then.
Though the masterpiece is Haldankar's creation, it has been wrongly attributed to legendary painter Raja Ravi Verma.
The girl in the painting was Gita Uplekar, Haldankar's third daughter. She was staying at Kolhapur since the 1940s after her marriage to jeweller Krishnakant Uplekar.
Gita with a copy of the painting | Amey Mansabdar |
She is survived by two daughters and a son and was staying in the house of the daughter who lives in the US, he said.
"I was 12 and lighting the Diwali diya when Bhau (her father Haldankar) saw me and asked me to pose for the sketch," Gita had said at an event in Kolhapur to mark her turning 100.
The painting was completed in three days, she had said.
Raja Uplekar had said some years ago, a buyer from France was ready to buy the painting for Rs 8 crore, but the Mysuru gallery did not part with the portrait, which was bought from Haldankar for Rs 300.
When the painting was being done, she had to hold her pose for over three hours continuously, Gita Uplekar had said. There is an interesting story about how the idea for this iconic painting was conceived. During one Diwali, Haldankar saw his daughter in a beautiful sari with a candle and her hand woven around the flame to prevent the wind from blowing it out. The rays of the candle radiated from the gap within her fingers and it also illuminated her face.
(Source: The Week)
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