Diamond Dancing Doll I
Print
2021 (printed)
2021 (printed)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Diamond Dancing Dolls I and II are double-layered lithographs which celebrate the iconic figure of David Bowie. The work is based on a series of Narielwalla’s signature collage images and explores themes of adornment, identity and transformation. Bowie was ‘fascinated by the relationship between artifice and authenticity’. The singer’s shape-shifting ability to project different personas through dress, make-up and performance is the subject of these images. At their basis these dancing dolls explore the desire to transform into another self by working over a repeated template of Bowie’s ‘Ziggy’ face and his dancing figure, each of which is defined by highly elaborate, decorative costuming. Cipher-like, the embellished figures carry references to the gender-fluid traditions of kabuki and onnagata, which were an influence on Bowie’s approach to challenging conventions about identity and sexuality.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Diamond Dancing Doll I (assigned by artist) |
Materials and techniques | Lithograph on paper, with laser die-cutting and foiling. |
Brief description | Hormazd Narielwalla: Diamond Dancing Doll I, lithograph, 2021 |
Physical description | Collage-style image of a dancing figure with the head of David Bowie. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions | 7/35 HN 2021 (in pencil) |
Credit line | Given by Hormazd Narielwalla |
Summary | Diamond Dancing Dolls I and II are double-layered lithographs which celebrate the iconic figure of David Bowie. The work is based on a series of Narielwalla’s signature collage images and explores themes of adornment, identity and transformation. Bowie was ‘fascinated by the relationship between artifice and authenticity’. The singer’s shape-shifting ability to project different personas through dress, make-up and performance is the subject of these images. At their basis these dancing dolls explore the desire to transform into another self by working over a repeated template of Bowie’s ‘Ziggy’ face and his dancing figure, each of which is defined by highly elaborate, decorative costuming. Cipher-like, the embellished figures carry references to the gender-fluid traditions of kabuki and onnagata, which were an influence on Bowie’s approach to challenging conventions about identity and sexuality. |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.73-2021 |
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Record created | August 19, 2021 |
Record URL |
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