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Diamond Dancing Doll II

Print
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
TitleDiamond Dancing Doll II (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Lithograph on paper, with laser die-cutting and foiling.
Brief description
Hormazd Narielwalla: Diamond Dancing Doll II, lithograph, 2021
Physical description
Collage-style image of a dancing figure with the head of David Bowie.
Dimensions
  • Sheet height: 69cm
  • Sheet width: 49cm
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.74-2021

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Record createdAugust 19, 2021
Record URL
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