There Are No Love Letters Here is a project documenting and re-imagining Cowasji’s family history through the material objects and the family lore passed on through generations, performing the characters embodied by her grandparents, grand aunts and many other figures in her extended family.
Co-curated by:
Prashant Panjiar and Tanvi Mishra
Using the historic wet-plate-collodion process—a slow and demanding photographic method from 1851—this work seeks to mirror the history of the Chari as a portraiture of their unbroken lineage and continued legacy.
Curated by:
Prashant Panjiar
This photobooth is inspired by the street photo booths of the early 20th century.
Trace 400 years of living history through the lanes of Chari Waddo — home to the first citizens of Moira, known for their skill in traditional carpentry and metal fabrication.
Feeling Home. Where is Home? brings together the work of five photographers whose practices engage with the ideas of home in distinct and personal ways.
Curated by:
Dinesh Khanna
In Goa’s sun-drenched, tropical landscape, where semi-open shaded spaces are vital for comfort, renowned architect Vinu Daniel’s latest installation Terra-grove beautifully reimagines how public spaces can be inviting, responsive, and sustainable.
Curated by:
Thukral & Tagra
Barge holds a cavity, a space and an absence for presence to exist. In functional form, these presences may be perceivable matter, or traces of an echo.
Curated by:
Veeranganakumari Solanki
Thukral and Tagra’s Multiplay returns serving as a sandbox for collective experiences, where multiple minds converge within a structured framework to nurture care, inclusion, and offer moments of respite.
Curated by:
Thukral and Tagra
A Breath Held Long is a 20–25-minute video by Sudarshan Shetty that merges documentary filmmaking with theatre and music.
Curated by:
Sudarshan Shetty
These artists manifest their attentiveness to the otherness of other places through distinctive approaches, ranging from cosmopolitan curiosity and activist engagement through bafflement and anxiety to empathy and melancholia.
Curated by:
Ranjit Hoskote

