

This contemporary Ganesha is assembled like a reliquary of the present—devotional icon, street collage, and mechanical gaze fused into a single, frontal apparition. The centered symmetry lends the figure a temple-like stillness, yet the camera-lens eyes and stitched, layered textures introduce an unsettling awareness, as if faith itself is being recorded and replayed through modern apparatus. Saturated blues and reds anchor the body in sensual materiality while the gilt fragments and patterned ground shimmer like broken halos, suggesting a spirituality rebuilt from shards of memory, ritual, and urban noise. In that tension, the work reads as both blessing and critique: the sacred persists, but only by learning new skins.







