But such popularity has returned to RRV's work after decades of vilification and near elimination from public memory. RRV was so popular in his times and after (he lived between 1848 -1906) that he became a generic brand of sorts, much like Xerox is to photocopying or Band-Aid is to medicated plaster. So everyone and anyone felt free to get 'inspired'. Imitation might be the highest form of flattery, but when done by those lacking with any aesthetics, the garish reproductions, which are more widely seen than the originals, are partly responsible for the derisory perception of the artist's actual work. As Kamat says, a lot of Indians take RRV for granted, much like we do with Kalidas or Vyasa so we don't think about the person behind these works.
But that is only half the woe. By the first half of the century, the progressive art movement had set in, in India. The progressives dismissed RRV as "cheap, popular and sentimental" and he was considered "kitschy and not modern enough for using European portrait techniques in Indian art which till then was two-dimensional" according to Bhatia. His realism, which was a break from the highly stylized contemplative Indian tradition, has been accused of "treachery and betrayal". Not to mention the sacrilege of using oils instead of gouache and tempera, the traditional Indian mediums. Because he painted Indian figures in European style, they accused him of spawning a "bastard" tradition. The artist's image, and hence market, took a further beating.