Vivarta, Wood, jute, Nadachadi (ritual protection thread used in the Indian subcontinent), print, and handmade paper. 2020
In Hindu mythology, the banyan tree is also called kalpavriksha, meaning "wish-fulfilling tree", as it represents eternal life because of its seemingly ever-expanding branches. This is an interactive installation playing with the idea of the tree of life motif, adapted from the Sidi Sayed Jali (Ahmedabad, Gujarat), in the form of a wishing tree.
The work invites the audience to pick a scratch card and tie it to the tree with the nadachadi (ritual protection thread), akin to the symbolism of what is predestined rather than what we aspire.
In Hindu mythology, the banyan tree is also called kalpavriksha, meaning "wish-fulfilling tree", as it represents eternal life because of its seemingly ever-expanding branches. This is an interactive installation playing with the idea of the tree of life motif, adapted from the Sidi Sayed Jali (Ahmedabad, Gujarat), in the form of a wishing tree.
The work invites the audience to pick a scratch card and tie it to the tree with the nadachadi (ritual protection thread), akin to the symbolism of what is predestined rather than what we aspire.