Anita Dube
(1958)
Offering
Born in Lucknow, Anita Dube studied art history and criticism at the Faculty of Fine Arts of M.S. University, Baroda. Associated briefly with the Radical Painters and Sculptors Association of Baroda in the 1980s, the artist’s work continues to be informed by her strong liberal political agenda. Presently, Dube’s oeuvre spans a wide range of media and speaks of personal and social issues including violence, loss, power, belief and desire, often...
Born in Lucknow, Anita Dube studied art history and criticism at the Faculty of Fine Arts of M.S. University, Baroda. Associated briefly with the Radical Painters and Sculptors Association of Baroda in the 1980s, the artist’s work continues to be informed by her strong liberal political agenda. Presently, Dube’s oeuvre spans a wide range of media and speaks of personal and social issues including violence, loss, power, belief and desire, often employing and politicizing the body as either site or vehicle. As she explains, “…I am attracted to things that shake the nervous system out of its comfort zone. Violently visceral things interest me as vehicles for transformation. And erotics and politics are both sites where these sorts of transformations occur” (rpt. in Anita Dube interview by Peter Nagy, Icon: India Contemporary, Bose Pacia exhibition catalogue, Venice, 2005, p. 23).
Dube has been using tiny painted enamel eyes in her work for several years now, whether site-specific installations, photography projects or sculptures. Traditionally used to decorate Hindu idols, the artist explains how she came across these eyes almost a decade ago and why she continues to use them, saying, “I had seen a single eye installed and painted, again and again, in the work of the Indian painter Gogi Saroj Pal, it fascinated me for its incredible presence, as something nearest to being human and alive. When I actually got around to using it, I found that when you have a cluster of them they carry the energy and charge of crowds of people. The sense of being in crowded places, even messy dirty places, an attraction to the violent energy present in these situations, which is either revolutionary or fascist, is the reason I continue to explore this material” (rpt. in Ibid.).
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Lot
74
of
140
SUMMER AUCTION 2008
18-19 JUNE 2008
Estimate
$10,000 - 12,000
Rs 4,00,000 - 4,80,000
Winning Bid
$38,813
Rs 15,52,500
(Inclusive of Buyer's Premium)
USD payment only.
Why?
ARTWORK DETAILS
Anita Dube
Offering
Signed and dated in English (verso)
2000
Silver gelatin print
12.5 x 55.5 in (31.8 x 141 cm)
This work comprises of three panels with each panel measuring 12.5 x 18.5 inches
All three works are from a limited edition of ten
The left panel is fifth from a limited edition of ten
The middle panel is sixth from a limited edition of ten
The right panel is eighth from a limited edition of ten
EXHIBITED AND PUBLISHED:
Anita Dube: Illegal, Bose Pacia and Nature Morte exhibition catalogue, New York and New Delhi, 2005
iCON: India Contemporary at the Venice Biennale, Bose Pacia exhibition catalogue, Venice, 2005
Noor...etc. Photographs by Anita Dube, Bombay Art Gallery, Mumbai, 2005
Category: Photography
Style: Figurative
ARTWORK SIZE:
Height of Figure: 6'