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Luigi Ontani — Tantra Melia
Luigi Ontani

Tantra Melia

2002

Tantra Melia presents a staged photographic tableau in which Luigi Ontani appears robed in a richly embroidered golden garment bearing the Sanskrit symbol Om, his hands raised in a gesture of benediction while a kneeling figure, seen from behind, adopts a posture of supplication or devotion before him. Marigold garlands, a flower long associated with Hindu ritual and offering, adorn both the kneeling figure and Ontani's feet, anchoring the composition in the visual language of South Asian devotional practice. The soft mint and pale blue of the studio backdrop lend the image an otherworldly, icon-like quality, recalling the flat chromatic fields of religious painting. The photograph has been watercolored by hand, a technique Ontani has employed throughout his career to soften the mechanical precision of the lens and suffuse his images with the warmth and intimacy of painted devotional objects. Ontani has spent decades elaborating a singular artistic mythology in which he inhabits, with theatrical conviction and genuine erudition, figures drawn from art history, mythology, religion, and popular culture across multiple civilizations. His extended residencies in India, beginning in the 1970s, brought him into sustained contact with Hindu iconography and tantric visual traditions, and that encounter permeates the imagery of Tantra Melia. The work does not simply appropriate the aesthetics of another culture but rather stages a form of living icon, collapsing the distance between devotee and deity, observer and observed, self and archetype. The dual figures, one resplendent and frontal, one naked and turned away, suggest a meditation on initiation, surrender, and the transmission of sacred knowledge. At a compact 17.5 by 11.7 centimeters, the work operates at intimate scale, demanding close looking and rewarding the collector who engages with it as one would a precious miniature or votive object. The gilt frame reinforces this reading, positioning the photograph within a tradition of enshrined imagery. Produced in 2002, the work belongs to a mature phase of Ontani's practice in which his synthesis of Eastern and Western symbolic vocabularies had achieved a refined coherence. For a collector, Tantra Melia offers an entry point into one of the most idiosyncratic and sustained bodies of work in postwar Italian art, combining conceptual rigor with an unabashed celebration of beauty, ritual, and transformation.

Medium
Watercolored photography

🔨 Auction Lot

Martini Studio d'Arte: Modern And Contemporary Art

June 10, 2026

Estimate: €2,000 to €4,000

Lot 101

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About this work

Luigi Ontani, Tantra Melia, 2002

Tantra Melia presents a staged photographic tableau in which Luigi Ontani appears robed in a richly embroidered golden garment bearing the Sanskrit symbol Om, his hands raised in a gesture of benediction while a kneeling figure, seen from behind, adopts a posture of supplication or devotion before him. Marigold garlands, a flower long associated with Hindu ritual and offering, adorn both the kneeling figure and Ontani's feet, anchoring the composition in the visual language of South Asian devotional practice. The soft mint and pale blue of the studio backdrop lend the image an otherworldly, icon-like quality, recalling the flat chromatic fields of religious painting. The photograph has been watercolored by hand, a technique Ontani has employed throughout his career to soften the mechanical precision of the lens and suffuse his images with the warmth and intimacy of painted devotional objects. Ontani has spent decades elaborating a singular artistic mythology in which he inhabits, with theatrical conviction and genuine erudition, figures drawn from art history, mythology, religion, and popular culture across multiple civilizations. His extended residencies in India, beginning in the 1970s, brought him into sustained contact with Hindu iconography and tantric visual traditions, and that encounter permeates the imagery of Tantra Melia. The work does not simply appropriate the aesthetics of another culture but rather stages a form of living icon, collapsing the distance between devotee and deity, observer and observed, self and archetype. The dual figures, one resplendent and frontal, one naked and turned away, suggest a meditation on initiation, surrender, and the transmission of sacred knowledge. At a compact 17.5 by 11.7 centimeters, the work operates at intimate scale, demanding close looking and rewarding the collector who engages with it as one would a precious miniature or votive object. The gilt frame reinforces this reading, positioning the photograph within a tradition of enshrined imagery. Produced in 2002, the work belongs to a mature phase of Ontani's practice in which his synthesis of Eastern and Western symbolic vocabularies had achieved a refined coherence. For a collector, Tantra Melia offers an entry point into one of the most idiosyncratic and sustained bodies of work in postwar Italian art, combining conceptual rigor with an unabashed celebration of beauty, ritual, and transformation.

Medium
Watercolored photography
Year
2002
Seen at
Martini Studio d'Arte

Related themes

Photography, Performance Art, Pastel Tones, Tableau Photography, Male Artist, Self Portrait, Mixed Media, Costume And Dress, Conceptual Art, Postmodern, Italian Artist, Staged Photography, Mythological Themes, Hand Colored, Religious Iconography, Gold And Blue, Spiritual Themes, Figurative, Icon And Symbol, Cultural Identity, Ritual And Devotion

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