Raqib Shaw’'s gloriously opulent paintings suggest a fantastical world full of intricate detail, rich colour, and jewel-like surfaces, all masking the intense violent and sexual nature of its imagery. Inspired by Hieronymous Bosch’'s fifteenth century visionary triptych, Shaw’'s series of works similarly titled ‘Garden of Earthly Delights’ celebrate a society free of any moral restraint. Populated with a wealth of hybrid creatures, Shaw portrays a dizzying scene of erotic hedonism, both explosive and gruesome in its debauchery. Fusing an array of vibrantly painted flora and fauna, Shaw creates an eco-system inhabited by figures such as phallus-headed birds, bug-eyed butterfly catchers, reptilian warriors or monkeys holding parasols, anthropomorphic in their gestures and regalia.
Shaw's unique technique, where pools of enamel and metallic industrial paints are manipulated to the desired effect with a porcupine quill, meticulously enhances numerous details within the paintings, such as coral, feathers or flowers. Every motif is outlined in embossed gold, a technique to similar to ‘cloisonné’ found in early Asian pottery, which is a source of inspiration to Shaw, along with Uchikake (Japanese wedding kimonos), Byobu (screens), Hokusai prints, Kashmiri shawls, medieval heraldry and Persian miniatures, carpets and jewellery.
Born in Kashmir, Raqib Shaw left India in 1998 for London where he studied for both his BA and MA at Central St Martins School of Art. Since leaving college, Shaw has exhibited internationally, most notably in ‘Without Boundary’, MoMA New York, ‘Around the world in Eighty Days’, ICA London, ‘6th Gwangju Biennale’, South Korea and a solo exhibition at ‘Art Now’, Tate Britain in 2006.
Get the Flash Player to see this player.
Raqib Shaw, White Cube Hoxton Square 2009
Interview
| Artworks | |
![]() | I 2 Images |
![]() | II 4 Images |
![]() | III 4 Images |
![]() | IV 3 Images |
![]() | V 4 Images |
![]() | VI 4 Images |
| Videos/Audio | |
![]() | Raqib Shaw, White Cube Hoxton Square 2009 Video |
| Related Texts | |
| CV | |
| Bibliography | |
| Exhibitions | |
| Absence of God 20 May—4 Jul 2009 | |
| Artist's Publications Available in the Bookshop |
|
| Absence of God 2009 | |
| Back to Artist Index |