The painting, a watercolour masterpiece, is now housed in the Jaychama Rajendra Art Gallery at the Jaganmohan Palace in Mysore and is one of the most prized possessions as well as a major attractions 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. Though the painting is by Haldankar, it has been wrongly attributed to legendary painter Raja Ravi Verma.
To mark the occasion, a small event was organised on Thursday at Kolhapur, where she resides since 1940s, after her marriage to jeweller Krishnakant Uplekar.
"I was 12 and lighting the Diwali diya when Bhau (Haldankar) saw me and asked me to pose for the sketch," Gita said.
The painting was completed in three days, she added.
"It is a matter of pride for us that my mother's name is recognised by all art fans," Gita's daughter Parinita Shah said, adding that her mother relished her favourite ice cream on her 100th birthday.
When the painting was being done, Gita had to hold her pose for three or more hours continuously.
There is a very interesting story about how the idea for this painting was conceived.
Haldankar decided to model a painting on the same
lines. The medium used was water colours on painted handmade paper as he wanted to prove that he can paint without a single mistake as mistakes made with oil paints cannot be rectified.
The painting is in a domain which is usually darkened with curtains to highlight the subtlety of the glowing candle. The effect of the painting is heightened by the shadow of the woman in the back.
Born in 1882 in Maharashtra's Savantawadi, Sawlaram Lakshman Haldankar showed early promise and enrolled in the Sir JJ school of Arts, Mumbai.
He soon became a student of Dhurandhar and Cecil Burns. In 1908, he started the Haldankar Art Institute in Mumbai. Later, with other friends, he founded the Art School of India in 1918 and became its president.
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