C. Raja Raja Varma was an Indian painter and the youngest brother of the painter Raja Ravi Varma. He was known as a plein-air artist.[1] He acted as assistant, secretary, and business manager to his brother.
Life
editVarma was also an English language scholar.[citation needed] His diary The Diary of C. Raja Raja Varma was published by Oxford University Press (edited by Erwin Neumayer and Christine Schelberger).[2] It is considered[by whom?] as one of the most important and authentic source materials on the last ten years of the life of Raja Ravi Varma.[citation needed]
On 4 January 1905 after an operation for inflammation of the intestines, Raja Varma died childless at Bangalore. His nephew said that Varma regretted not having provided well for his wife, Janaki, who outlived him.[citation needed]
The British administrator Edgar Thurston was significant in promoting the careers of both Varma brothers.[3]
References
edit- ^ Kumar, R. Siva. "Varma, Ravi". Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
- ^ C. Raja Raja Varma (2005). Erwin Neumayer; Christine Schelberger (eds.). Raja Ravi Varma, portrait of an artist : the diary of C. Raja Raja Varma. New Delhi: Oxford university press. ISBN 9780195659719.
- ^ Mitter, Partha (1994). Art and Nationalism in Colonial India, 1850-1922: Occidental Orientations. Cambridge University Press. pp. 69, 193, 208. ISBN 978-0-52144-354-8.
- Kilimanur Chandran, Raja Ravi Varmayum Chithrakalyum, Department of Cultural publications, Government of Kerala, 1999. (in Malayalam)
- Portrait of an artist[usurped]