Gallery Silver Scpaes
Untitled
Untitled
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Artist: Eugene Kingman
Medium: Oil on Canvas
Size: 24 x 48 inches (60.96 x 121.92 cm)
This expansive oil painting by Paramjit Singh captures a majestic mountain landscape rendered in a serene and idealized style. The composition offers a sweeping view of nature's harmony, where the dynamic force of water meets the stillness of a high-altitude valley. Executed in soft yet detailed brushwork, the scene blends realism with an impressionistic sensibility, inviting viewers into a peaceful, untouched wilderness.
At the center of the composition, a rushing river in tones of light blue and gray carves its way down a rocky incline, forming a series of cascading waterfalls. The treatment of the water is particularly striking, ethereal and misty, almost dreamlike, giving the entire scene a meditative and tranquil quality. Fine mist rises from the falls, softening the edges of the landscape and adding atmospheric depth.
The foreground is rich with natural detail. Lush vegetation in varying shades of green, ranging from deep forest hues to fresh, bright tones, covers the ground. Shrubs and low-lying bushes cluster densely, while wildflowers add occasional splashes of delicate color. Light brown and ochre-toned rocks peek through the undergrowth along the riverbanks, grounding the composition with earthy contrast. Moving into the mid-ground and background, the eye is led upward through groves of medium-sized evergreen trees. Their layered foliage and staggered placement create a rhythmic pattern across the canvas. These trees, with their different shades of green, offer a natural progression toward the background, where the grandeur of the mountains takes form.
Towering snow-capped peaks rise in the distance, their summits bathed in soft grays and whites. A faint veil of mist envelops the mountains and waterfalls, enhancing the sense of atmospheric perspective and lending the entire landscape a poetic, almost spiritual dimension. The lighting is diffuse and gentle, casting subtle shadows and imbuing the entire scene with a warm, glowing calm. Paramjit Singh’s rendering of this mountain valley is not only a technical triumph but also an emotional one. The painting communicates a profound reverence for nature, its grandeur, its stillness, and its timeless beauty. Whether seen as a real place or a composite of the artist’s imagination, this landscape serves as an invitation to pause, reflect, and reconnect with the quiet majesty of the natural world.


Why Choose Us
Art has always, naturally, reflected the development and exploration of different thoughts and perceptions, and our current postmodern era is no different. It is interesting to see how art has evolved visually, yet the traditional methods of composing art remain a valid means of expression.
All it takes for an artist to rise above normalcy, is inspiration, which fuels his passion to paint beautiful creations throughout his life.
The valuable expression of art is always there with us, but now this expression is yet to take an interesting diversion with our art gallery, Gallery Silver Scapes, located in Hauz Khas Enclave. Art is no longer considered just decorative but has evolved and come forth as a major form of investment yielding high rates of returns for its buyers, making it an expression commonly used.

Mrs Mayor was walked into the art world by the legendary modernist Bimal Das Gupta, one of whose biggest collections remains with Gallery Silver Scapes. In the 1980s, as head and first curator of the Habiart Gallery founded by Mrs Rekha Modi — a childhood friend — Mrs Mayor worked closely with and curated shows for renowned artists such as A Ramachandran, GR Santosh, Rameshwar Broota, Sakti Burman, MK Bardhan, Dhiraj Chaudhury, M Sivanesan, and Arup Das among others.
Besides modern masters, she also worked with young contemporaries such as Sudip Roy, Paresh Maity, Subroto Kundu, Vinod Sharma, and many more. Artworks commissioned by her are now part of prestigious collections, such as those of the India Habitat Centre, Ranbaxy, Pepsi, Hotel Lalit, Bank of America, and many more private and public collections.