Jitish kallat cenotaph london

View Cenotaph (A Deed

View Cenotaph (A Deed of Transfer) by Jitish Kallat sold at Under the Influence on 11 April London. Learn more about the piece and artist, and its final selling price.


JITISH KALLAT (B. 1974) Cenotaph (A Deed of Transfer) captures the changing skin of a contested urban space, documenting the aftermath of a demolition drive on a Mumbai street when a row of decades-old pavement dwellings was torn down. Walls at the site of the demolition carry traces of the destroyed tenements that appear like floor plans projected on to a vertical wall.

Browse the works and JITISH KALLAT (B. ) Cenotaph (A Deed of Transfer) lenticular prints 17½ x 25 7/8 in. ( x 66 cm.) each Executed in A group of twenty lenticular prints; number eight from an edition of ten.
Explore Jitish Kallat's past auction results When a poor Indian girl took her life because her mother did not have a rupee (15 cents) to buy her food, Jitish Kallat, one of India's most important contemporary artists, could not but be.
jitish kallat cenotaph london

Cenotaph (A Deed Of Transfer) Dominating the vast Georgian-era quadrangle of London's Somerset House for the next two months is an outdoor installation by the Mumbai artist Jitish Kallat, his first public commission in.

Cenotaph (A Deed Of Transfer)

Acrylic and metallic paint on Celebrated Mumbai-based painter, sculptor, photographer, and installation artist Jitish Kallat immortalises his bustling birthplace through large-scale sculptures, detailed paintings and other media to document a changing India.


It was the culmination View Jitish Kallat artworks sold at auction to research and compare prices. Subscribe to access price results for , artists!.
Acrylic and metallic paint on

Kallat's photographic work includes a Jitish Kallat (b. , Mumbai, India, where he continues to live and work) Jitish Kallat’s works straddle the intersections of science, historical memory, existential inquiry, and the rhythms of the natural world, prompting reflections on our planetary presence and place in the cosmos. A consistent approach in Kallat’s pra.



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