Anju Dodiya
(1964)
Flame Play
The present lot is part of a series of double-sided works by Anju Dodiya, first exhibited as part of Throne of Frost, a 2007 exhibition of site-specific installations held at the opulent Durbar Hall of the Lakshmi Vilas Palace in Baroda. Each piece in the series features a watercolour and charcoal painting on paper, paired with an embroidered mattress. These elements were mounted within free-standing wooden frames positioned so that the...
The present lot is part of a series of double-sided works by Anju Dodiya, first exhibited as part of Throne of Frost, a 2007 exhibition of site-specific installations held at the opulent Durbar Hall of the Lakshmi Vilas Palace in Baroda. Each piece in the series features a watercolour and charcoal painting on paper, paired with an embroidered mattress. These elements were mounted within free-standing wooden frames positioned so that the painting faced inward with the mattress facing the viewer. Scattered shards of broken mirrors lay within the formation, reflecting fragments of the paintings and the grandeur of the Durbar Hall. Dodiya’s paintings are layered with poetic symbolism and personal mythology. Her theatrical cast of figures draw from an eclectic array of influences that span Renaissance paintings and tapestries, Japanese Ukiyo-e prints, courtly traditions across cultures, mythology from both East and West, folklore, and cinema. The mattress on the reverse is cloaked in textured fabric and embroidered with heraldic symbols, speaking to the artist’s enduring fascination with the chivalric age. Art historian Tasneem Mehta remarks, “Dodiya’s extraordinary visual layering [...] is a metaphor for the mind and its many deceptions and conceits. Her protagonists are the various selves she battles. The violence is almost palpable [...] The charcoal women, finely chiselled yet uncompromising and cold, skilfully mock-accept notions of beauty and the heroic that traditional art and myth have valorised. [...] The artist also combines a skilful juxtaposition of materials and mediums-the soft sharpness of charcoal, a medium almost ephemeral in its consistency; the sensuous transparency of watercolour; the sculptural hardness of slate-grey metal; and textiles with their history of enduring feminine engagement. [...] The colour black is both ominous and defining. It contains even as it negates. Its harshness disrupts the precious beauty of the watercolours so skilfully deployed by the artist.” (Tasneem Mehta, “The Seductions of Horror”, Art India Vol XII [Issue I, Quarter I], 2007, p. 117)
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Lot
133
of
142
SUMMER ONLINE AUCTION
18-19 JUNE 2025
Estimate
$25,000 - 35,000
Rs 21,25,000 - 29,75,000
Winning Bid
$31,200
Rs 26,52,000
(Inclusive of Buyer's Premium)
USD payment only.
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ARTWORK DETAILS
Anju Dodiya
Flame Play
2006
Charcoal and watercolour on paper and embroidery on mattress
83.75 x 54.5 in (212.5 x 138.5 cm)
This is a double-panelled work
PROVENANCE Bodhi Art, Mumbai Christie's, New York, 17 March 2021, lot 1053 Property of an International Distinguished Collector
EXHIBITEDThrone of Frost: Anju Dodiya , Vadodara: Laxmi Vilas Palace, 14 - 21 March 2007; Mumbai: Bodhi Art, 9 April - 31 May 2007 PUBLISHED Nancy Adajania and Sharada Dwivedi, Throne of Frost: Anju Dodiya , Singapore: Bodhi Art, 2007, pp. 11-13, 77, 102, 114, 116-118, 130, 133, 144 (illustrated)
Category: Installation
Style: Figurative