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Design for Development

Yō no-bi 用の美: The Beauty of Everyday Things: 7 - 12 November 2025

Yō no-bi 用の美: The Beauty of Everyday Things: 7 - 12 November 2025

Yō no-bi 用の美 sees beauty in everyday things made for daily use, by the unknown artisan. ARTISANS' celebrates five Japanese artisans, whose handcrafted work exhibits honesty, simplicity, and restraint over showy ornamentation.ARTISANS' brings five contemporary crafts from Japan under one roof, including lacquer ware by Gaku and Ayako Hirai, Yukiko Yagi; the pottery of Toshiko Nakajima; Ainu embroidery by Aimi Yotsuji; metal ware by Kasuo Kashima; and others.

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Elemental: Tribolt: Furniture Designer Makers of Nagaland: May 23 -31 2025

Elemental: Tribolt: Furniture Designer Makers of Nagaland: May 23 -31 2025

Furniture designer-makers Ajung Yaden and Atem Longkumer left their secure careers to embark on a journey to reconnect with their Naga heritage. Together, the husband and wife duo, founded TRIBOLT, transforming a lifelong passion for woodworking and design into a profession. TRIBOLT honours the authenticity of Naga craft and culture, and its deep connection to nature. With wood as their medium, Ajung and Atem respond to the innate qualities that make each piece of wood unique - its cracks, markings, flaws, and all. 

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Katna’s Kantha: Fine Hand Embroidery from Murshidabad

Katna’s Kantha: Fine Hand Embroidery from Murshidabad
The Street Survivors India project, founded by Shabnam Ramaswamy, established a center in Murshidabad in 2004 with a view to provide employment to women living in the villages of West Bengal. What began as a livelihood program quickly developed into the label ‘Katna’s Kantha.’  Continue reading

Ryoko Haraguchi: Indo-Japanese Collaboration

Ryoko Haraguchi: Indo-Japanese Collaboration

Haraguchi’s fascination with Indian textiles began in 1986, when she first visited the country while working for the Japanese brand, Muji. Since then, fascination transformed into a life-long passion, which Haraguchi has successfully channeled into a cross-cultural creative pursuit. Working collaboratively with skilled Indian weavers, her designs focus on the interplay of traditional Indian textiles with age-old Japanese dyeing techniques.

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Tara Books: Playing with Narratives and Structure

Tara Books: Playing with Narratives and Structure

Based in Chennai, Tara Book's aims to change the perspective from which stories are told, while simultaneously ensuring that their books are reflective of the rich heritage of India.The hallmark of their publishing is engagement with the vibrant diversity of Indian folk and tribal art. 

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Cultural Textiles: An Australian-Indian Dialogue Curated by Master Weaver Liz Williamson

Cultural Textiles: An Australian-Indian Dialogue Curated by Master Weaver Liz Williamson
As part of the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia study program, a young group of contemporary Australian designers worked with various artisans in Gujarat and Bengal to come up with innovative ideas in textile design to be displayed at the gallery.  Continue reading

Leshemi Origins: Wild Nettle of Nagaland

Indigenous women of the Chakesang tribe from Leshemi, a remote Naga village in the mountains of North East India, continue to weave nettle shawls, unique to their own identity, on back-strapped looms. The fiber-to-fabric journey is completely local and self-sustaining.

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IMC IMPACT 2018 Fashion Show and Bazaar: 8x8 Rural Artisans x Urban Designers

IMC IMPACT 2018 Fashion Show and Bazaar: 8x8 Rural Artisans x Urban Designers
The IMC IMPACT 2018 Fashion Show and Bazaar presents work co-created by women artisans and designers, highlighting traditional craft practices and, where the design solutions are rooted in India’s current context, culture and identity. The idea behind this bazaar is not just to showcase the skills of rural women artisans, but also to raise consumer consciousness in Mumbai and support sustainable fashion and development. Continue reading