Dhruv Agarwwal is an emerging Indian designer who received India’s Best Design Award in 2021 for his exceptional chandelier, Bloom. Wonderfully jovial, Bloom is a celebration of crafts and explores nostalgia and childlike curiosities. The luminous installation studies the concept of looking at things from a different point of view, or with a reversed perspective. Made by the craftsmen of traditional Channapatna toys, the vibrant colors of the wooden forms recall the playfulness of children’s toys but also our attraction to the brightly colored motifs of flowers. From below, the layers of the concentric circles of the chandelier cascade down theatrically to the central lotus, like that of a collapsible toy. At the lowest point, close to the eyes of the viewer, the lotus flower tempts our eyes, asking us to lean in and appreciate its enameled petals, which glisten with the surrounding layers of lights in a joyful manner.
Channapatna toys originated from the town of Channapatna in the Ramanagara district of Karnataka state, India. This art form can be traced back to the ruling of Tipu Sultan, Mysore’s historic ruler, whose patronage to these wooden toys and to arts in general allowed his people to thrive and flourish. Over time, however, the art became an expensive affair and it subsequently required the assistance of Japanese doll making techniques to improve productivity and to reinvent the art form. Following the traditional process, the wood for Bloom was procured, seasoned, cut into the desired shapes, pruned and carved into scaled-up toys, which were then coated with wax lacquer or in the case of the lotus flower, in mild steel with Meenakari enamel, a traditional technique that has been practiced in India for many centuries. The original color palette of the Channapatna toys has been retained for the continuation of their legacy.