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Art Mart
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| Text by Maria Louis | |||||||||||||
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Published: Volume 15, Issue 4, April, 2007
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Recently unveiled in Baroda and now on show in Mumbai, Anju Dodiya's Throne of Frost conjures up regal resonances of the past
Interestingly, the ornate Durbar hall of the palace with its luxurious furnishings and resonances of royalty was not just the venue, but the catalyst for the show comprising paintings and installations enigmatically arranged along the sides of a square, with a sea of cracked mirrors (that exhibited fragments of those mysterious images in conjunction with broken reflections of jharokhas and chandeliers) filling the space inside the square. "In a significant way, this invitation to the palace marks an artistic homecoming for Anju, whose work has always gathered energy from heraldic symbolism, the drama of chivalric devices, tales of duel, joust and troubadour romance and the narratives of knights, samurais and their ladies," discloses curator, Nancy Adajania, in the catalogue essay. "The artist responds to the opulence of the palace by shrouding her protagonists in charcoal dust."
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