Arts_Illustrated_-_February-March_2016

(Ann) #1
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A


clever inversion of what could
otherwise easily be perceived as
a cliché punctuates the feminist
structuring behind ‘Fall and Rise,’ Princess
Pea’s latest series of 500 toy sculptures that
will debut at the design store of India Art
Fair. Handmade by traditional craftsmen in
the village of Etikoppaka where the tradition
of making toys, decorative ornaments and
images of deities dates back to 300 BC,
the doll is the wooden embodiment of its
progenitor – Princess Pea. She was conceived
in 2008 by an anonymous Delhi-based artist
who had made the inimitable giant head
with pea-shaped ears to creatively resist the
unnatural ideals of beauty thrust at women
over centuries by the patriarchal forces that
be. When pressed, the unassuming button
at the base of the pedestal destabilises
the toy sculpture. Within seconds, the
erect being with boxing-gloved hands
seemingly collapses only to rise feistily and
spontaneously from her apparent posture of

defeat. ‘All I wanted was to work with the
key word of "strength", with the delicate
approach and visual language I have been
working with,’ said Princess Pea’s maker.
‘This toy sculpture can also be seen as a
symbol of standing up, and as an ambassador
which tries to embody the idea of power and
raising your voice.’
Princess Pea’s etymological beginnings can
be traced to Hans Christian’s Anderson’s
fairytale of ‘The Princess and the Pea’ and
Simone de Beauvoir’s 1949 dictum – ‘One
is not born a woman, one becomes one’. A
serendipitous gesture led to the birth of the
iconic figurine. Her maker had ploughed
the land to combine different kinds of
clay that formed the dough that was used
to create her original prototype; a giant,
hollow, quasi-female head that was sculpted
and left to set. A fresh wild shoot sprouted
through the texture of the scalp, fortuitously
animating the sculpture, transforming it
from a non-living representational structure

By Rosalyn D’Mello


Princess Power

DeBUTiNG aT iNDia aRT faiR, PRiNcess Pea’s laTesT seRies of 500 ToY
scUlPTURes aRe a ReMiNDeR of wHaT THe aNoNYMoUs DelHi-BaseD
aRTisT HaD oRiGiNallY iNTeNDeD THeM To Be – a sUBVeRsiVe PReseNce
aND a RefeReNce To THe HisToRical oPPRessioN of woMeN

Design

(^106) / arts illustrated / feb 2016 - mar 2016 /IAF - Delhi Connecting Art

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