For Nruthya Kesavan and Ishwar Sridharan, the vision for their Bengaluru home was divided right down the middle. “Our requirements presented a bit of a conundrum for the design team,” recalls Kesavan, a technology professional. “While I wanted a colonial touch reminiscent of my grandparents’ home where I grew up, Ishwar was keen on a South Indian aesthetic that wasn’t overly traditional. It was a divided brief that Gayathri and Shreya somehow made good on.”
Hampa Sircar Das brings a distinctive narrative sensibility to contemporary Indian art, where memory, mythology,…
Meghana Kishore’s paintings unfold as quiet, immersive spaces that invite a slowing down of perception.…
Yuvan Bothysathuvar constructs a visual universe that is at once playful and intensely immersive. His…