An excellent example of the straightforward style which defined his oeuvre in the 1980s and first brought him critical acclaim, this work by Atul Dodiya is from an important series featuring a stark interior and a single central figure. Taking cues from the 2-dimensional candy colored pop of David Hockney, Untitled depicts a man studying a work of art. In a conversation with the artist, he explained that as a student he would frequent the Jehangir Art Gallery in Mumbai. As people from all walks of life visited the gallery, Dodiya became curious of the layman's or non-art students interaction with art. Be it a villager, a businessman with his briefcase or guest at the café
Dodiya began to paint these scenes placing a viewer together or in conversation with a piece of art. While his concerns with the viewer and their understanding and interpretation of art continue untill today, 1987, was a particularly significant year for the artist and it was then that he first began to feel a sense of resolution on his canvases, enjoying the dialogue he created and process that he had undertaken to represent it.