Emerging Voices & Cross‑Medium Creativity

Emerging Voices & Cross‑Medium Creativity

A new generation of artists is shaping Kolkata’s future. Creators like Rohan Dasgupta (metal sculptures from junk), Ipshita Roy (black-and-white street photography), and Debojyoti Basu (digital folklore collages) are making waves locally and online. They challenge norms, mix mediums, and often...

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Street Art & Murals: Public Narratives Come Alive

Street Art & Murals: Public Narratives Come Alive

Kolkata’s walls are now loud with colour and conscience. Areas like Hindustan Park, Jadavpur, and Rajabazar are transforming into open-air galleries. Street artists are using walls to narrate local histories, protest politics, celebrate icons like Tagore or Satyajit Ray, and even honour...

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Miniature Paintings of Rajasthan: Art in the Details

Miniature Paintings of Rajasthan: Art in the Details

Miniature paintings were often commissioned by kings and nobles to immortalize courtly scenes, romantic tales, battles, and spiritual themes. Each region in Rajasthan developed its own distinct style—Jaipur, Mewar, Marwar, Bundi, Kishangarh—all bearing unique colour palettes, themes, and...

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Gond Art: Tribal Narratives in Dots and Lines

Gond Art: Tribal Narratives in Dots and Lines

Gond Art is one of India’s most fascinating tribal art traditions, originating among the Gond people of central India—especially in Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, and parts of Maharashtra and Odisha. This art form is not just decorative; it’s a storytelling medium where every line, dot, and...

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Khatamband Ceilings: Geometric Wooden Art

Khatamband Ceilings: Geometric Wooden Art

Khatamband ceilings are Kashmir’s architectural jewel—a breathtaking mosaic of interlocking wooden panels assembled without nails or glue. This geometric art form transforms flat ceilings into stunning patterns of stars, hexagons, and floral rosettes, evoking Islamic art’s love of symmetry and...

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Copperware Art: Traditional Crafts of Srinagar

Copperware Art: Traditional Crafts of Srinagar

Kashmir’s copperware tradition is a gleaming testament to its rich artistic heritage. Walk through the lanes of Srinagar’s Zaina Kadal, and you’ll find workshops ringing with the sound of chisels on copper. Here, artisans known as naqash craft beautifully engraved utensils, trays, samovars, and...

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Stone Carving in Kashmir: Forgotten Art

Stone Carving in Kashmir: Forgotten Art

Stone carving in Kashmir is an ancient art that once adorned mosques, temples, bridges, and palaces with intricate elegance. From the majestic Martand Sun Temple ruins to delicately carved graves and fountains in Srinagar, stone’s cold solidity was transformed by Kashmiri artisans into flowing...

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Kashmiri Crewel Work: Stitched Landscapes

Kashmiri Crewel Work: Stitched Landscapes

Kashmiri crewel embroidery is a tapestry of stitched landscapes—lush florals, flowing vines, and stylized trees spreading across fabric with bold, confident lines. Unlike delicate Sozni or Aari work, crewel is known for its thicker woolen threads and dramatic, slightly raised surface, giving it...

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Aari Work Embroidery: Floral Elegance on Fabric

Aari Work Embroidery: Floral Elegance on Fabric

Aari embroidery is Kashmir’s answer to wearable art—floral, flowing, and fabulously detailed. Named after the hooked needle (aari) used to make it, this technique produces fine, chain-stitched designs that seem to grow organically across the fabric. Traditionally done on woolen shawls,...

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Tilla Embroidery: Royal Touch for Bridal Wear

Tilla Embroidery: Royal Touch for Bridal Wear

Tilla embroidery is Kashmir’s regal embellishment, lending garments a shimmering, luxurious touch. Traditionally done with metallic threads—gold or silver—Tilla work has long been associated with bridal wear, festive attire, and formal pherans. The process begins with drawing intricate...

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