'Ville Provencale' was first exhibited at Venice Biennale in 1956, before it was secreted away into private collections for many decades.
Created during Raza's formative years in France, the painting, distinguished by its vivid colors, displays a semi- abstracted view of a town in rural Provence.
Terming the art a "momentous, museum-quality work", Yamini Mehta, International Head of South Asian Art, said that the painting is "a unique hybridisation of Raza's deep rooted Indian heritage with the post-war modernism that was blossoming in the French art scene".
Raza, along with M F Husain, Dinkar Kaushik and Akbar Padamsee, represented India at the Venice Biennale, where Ville Provenale was first displayed in 1956.
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S H Raza's influential relationship with France began in 1950, when he left India for Paris with a bursary from the French Government to study at the cole Nationale des Beaux- Arts.
Raza's move to France provided him with the foundation on which to grow and flourish as an international artist; however it also encouraged him to reconnect with his Indian heritage. These compound influences proved most significant.
Ville Provencale will be exhibited at The Oberoi Hotel in New Delhi on February 22-23 as part of a traveling exhibition of highlights from the sale.