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series work- Women's Carnival by the red sea (2023)

This work emerged after 'Where poet's cry', 

the shedding surface carries a sense of release and transformation, like a an emergence. The aluminum wire have given it a skeletal structure while allowing the fabric to flow, almost like a spirit in motion. Womens carnival by the red sea The carnival is a liminal space, a rupture in time where women shed imposed identities, reveling in their raw, unfiltered selves. Layers of fabric, fragments of the sea, and spectral silhouettes suggest the transient nature of freedom—fleeting yet profound. The Red Sea, an ancient witness, cradles these untold stories, echoing the laughter, resilience, and unspoken sorrows carried in the tide.

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Where the Poets Cry 2022  series explores the intersection of poetry and visual art, where the unspeakable emotions of the poet are translated into a tactile, visual language. Though the poet's words give voice to the cry, it is the artist who shapes and gives form to this emotion, moving beyond language into a space where the cry is felt andexperienced. The series evolves from painting to collage to textile, each medium deepening the emotional resonance, while the suspended forms invite the viewer into a visceral dialogue with the silent cries that poets so often articulate. Through this work, I seek to honor the poet's emotional landscape and, in turn, transform it into something that can be seen, touched, and felt.​I faced a huge loss in my life, after my father passed away. For me this series came out as a cry words that cant be really express to others so I was dependent on painting.​This series have given birth to lot other pieces made afterwards

Where The Poets Cry

Under The Jackfruit Version (2022-23)

This series work was featured in the restoration project of Historical place "Rambha Palace" in the banks of Chilika lake in India

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"Forest I return to"

This visionary project was made as a part of invited Artist-in-residence for India Art Fair, this entire series is sponsored by Royal College of ART.

This page will show the work in process that went during the making of these closely, crafted handstitched huge tapestries. This ritual went on for a year until the show in 2025.

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