Gurcharan  Singh

Gurcharan Singh

1949

India

37 Artworks

Untitled
Untitled

₹ 300,000.00
$ 3,333.33

  • Ref No: 5802
  • Dimension: 18.5 X 24.5 Inch
    46.99 X 62.23 Cm
Introspective Time I
Introspective Time I

₹ 1,000,000.00
$ 11,111.11

  • Ref No: C1789
  • Dimension: 24 X 60 Inch
    60.96 X 152.4 Cm
Colorful Charecters
Colorful Charecters

₹ 700,000.00
$ 7,777.78

  • Ref No: C1791
  • Dimension: 24 X 36 Inch
    60.96 X 91.44 Cm
The Seeker
The Seeker

₹ 350,000.00
$ 3,888.89

  • Ref No: C1751
  • Dimension: 22 X 30 Inch
    55.88 X 76.2 Cm
Foresight
Foresight

₹ 350,000.00
$ 3,888.89

  • Ref No: C1752
  • Dimension: 22 X 30 Inch
    55.88 X 76.2 Cm
Urban Contact
Urban Contact

₹ 350,000.00
$ 3,888.89

  • Ref No: C1753
  • Dimension: 22 X 30 Inch
    55.88 X 76.2 Cm
Distant Difference
Distant Difference

₹ 350,000.00
$ 3,888.89

  • Ref No: C1755
  • Dimension: 22 X 30 Inch
    55.88 X 76.2 Cm
Second Thoughts
Second Thoughts

₹ 350,000.00
$ 3,888.89

  • Ref No: C1756
  • Dimension: 22 X 30 Inch
    55.88 X 76.2 Cm

Profile:

Born 1949, Patiala, Punjab

Gurcharan Singh is a distinguished Indian artist known for his deeply humanistic and visually rich portrayals of everyday life in India. A graduate of the Government College of Arts and Craft, Chandigarh (1973), Singh has spent over five decades developing a distinctive figurative style rooted in memory, observation, and a profound empathy for the marginalised. His paintings are populated by street performers, vendors, women, children, animals, and mythic figures, brought together in layered compositions that reflect the simultaneity of the sacred and the secular in Indian life.

Singh’s practice blends elements of Indian miniature painting, folk traditions, and modernist aesthetics, marked by strong contours, flattened perspective, and a vibrant palette. His works collapse time and space, weaving together fragments of personal memory and social history into tableaux that feel both intimate and collective. While his visual language is grounded in Indian urban and rural landscapes, it speaks to universal themes of displacement, labour, ritual, and belonging.

Over the years, Singh has held numerous solo exhibitions in India and abroad, including at venues in New Delhi, Mumbai, Chandigarh, Paris, London, Hamilton (Canada), and Seoul. He has represented India at major international platforms such as the Tokyo Biennale (1984), Seoul Contemporary Art Asian Shows (1986), and the Festival of India in the USSR (1987). His works are held in prominent collections including the National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi; Museum of Non-Aligned Countries, Yugoslavia; National Lalit Kala Akademi, Delhi; Birla Academy of Art & Culture, Kolkata; and several public and private collections across the globe.

As the artist himself notes, “Art for me is an expression… Though to the common eye it may appear familiar, in truth, this is my world made visible from the invisible.” Gurcharan Singh’s work continues to stand as a quiet but powerful testament to the dignity of everyday life, rendered with compassion, nuance, and formal mastery.