• Search Icon
  • Toggle Menu
  • Close Menu

Diamond Dolls, co-published by Concentric Circles and EMH Arts. London (2021)

Hormazd Narielwalla

The Stanley & Audrey Burton Gallery, University of Leeds

Placeholder

Image is currently unavailable

Details

Classification:

Artist's Book

Physical Object Description:

an artist’s book in three acts, signed and numbered, with eight special page features, built up from discarded Savile Row brown tailoring patterns

Credit:

Gift from the collection of Richard Sykes and Penny Mason through the Contemporary Art Society, 2023

Ownership history:

The Eagle Gallery / EMH Arts, London, 1995; purchased by Richard Sykes and Penny Mason, 1995; gifted by the late Dr Richard Sykes (1946-2019) and his wife Penny Mason through the Contemporary Art Society, 2023; presented to The Stanley & Audrey Burton Gallery, University of Leeds, 2023/24
Diamond Dolls (2021) is a sumptuous artist’s book that originates from a sequence of Hormazd Narielwalla’s highly distinctive paper collages. Thirty six images carry a running motif of David Bowie’s ‘Ziggy Stardust’ persona, each of which is defined by elaborate, decorative costuming. Cipher-like, the figures reference the Japanese gender-fluid traditions of kabuki and onnagata, which influenced Bowie in his approach to challenging conventions about sexuality.

The book is introduced by John O’Connell, author of Bowie’s Books (2019), who draws parallels between Bowie’s shape-shifting ability to project different personas through dress and make-up and Narielwalla’s exploration of themes that encompass identity, adornment and transformation. Conceived as a sculptural object in three parts and designed to stand like a series of shoji screens, Diamond Dolls pushes the boundaries of lithographic printing into the territory of an art medium. The original collages are printed front and back to reveal the ‘artifice’ of cutting and pasting involved in their construction, while the foiling of paper edges and details of debossed abstract patterns, gives the opening and arranging of the book a tactile and performative quality.

Diamond Dolls has also been acquired by public collections including Yale Center for British Art, USA; Tate, London and Bower Ashton Library Special Collection, Bristol.

All rights reserved. Any further use will need to be cleared with the rights holder. Permission granted to reproduce for personal and educational use only. Commercial copying, hiring, lending is prohibited. The collection that owns this artwork may have more information on their own website about permitted uses and image licensing options.

For further information, please consult our section of our copyright policy.

You Might Also Like