Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram

The walls of the art gallery at India International Centre these days are decorated with green canvases that hide symbols of triangles, circles and hemispheres, that bring back memories of studying geometry in school. Delhi-based artist Neha Sharma has turned these basic shapes into landscapes, giving the viewer full freedom to interpret these images in their own ways.
As our eyes zoom into every canvas, trying to comprehend these shapes, one frame appears to house a bunch of people staring into the vastness of the sky at night, lit with stars to give them company. Another frame appears to tell the tale of UFOs landing on a plain horizontal surface.
Among the many works in gouache and pigment, buildings twist and turn in the canvases and give architecture a whole new meaning. Tiny human figures dot Sharma’s canvases, standing next to tall stupa-resembling poles.
For the artist, creating these shapes into imaginary landscapes over the course of three months was much like “a meditation, a sadhna, and music that one chants”. Sharma says, “Geometry is related to human beings and it shows how human geometry and cosmic geometry are inter-related and is inseparable.” She says her work is a play between optical consciousness and unconsciousness, mystical and magical, cultural and natural.
The exhibition is on display at Annexe Building, India International Centre, Lodhi Road till March 31 . Contact: 24619431
Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram