Growing up in Mumbai, artist Atul Dodiya was fascinated by cinema posters, calendar art, and the lively street visuals around him. Over time, he realised that painting was the best way for him to explore ideas about history, identity, and the world around him. Art became his natural way of understanding and expressing his thoughts. His worldview is shaped by this. It is neither stridently agitational nor comfortably neutral; it is reflective, layered, and insistently democratic. Drawing from figures like Gandhi, cinema, poetry, and art history, he revisits the idea of India as a plural, argumentative space, often meditating on violence, memory, censorship, and the fragility of institutions. His politics lie in nuance: a defence of secular, liberal values; a scepticism of absolutism; and a belief that art must remain a site of ethical inquiry in turbulent times.
The painter as a gatecrasher
by Samiya Chopra | The New Indian Express
1 March 2026
