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Hindustan Times East UP
|March 08, 2026
A nun, a farmer, a man from a family of shipbreakers in Alang - the art put forth by outliers at the ongoing Kochi-Muziris Biennale is challenging, refreshing, demands that the viewer stop and think. Meet six of the artists
On the face of it, very little connects these six artists whose works are spread across Fort Kochi and its surrounding neighbourhoods, as part of the ongoing Kochi-Muziris Biennale:
Sister Roswin aka Malu Joy is a nun. Niroj Satpathy once worked with the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD). Dhiraj Rabha is the son of a former radical ideologue; Himanshu Jamod, the son of a labourer who stripped ships. Prabhahar Kamble does not separate his art from anti-caste critique; Kulpreet Singh sees no difference between his art practice and his socio-religious identity as a Sikh farmer.
They occupy different positions within the art world, some as yet unrepresented by galleries, some at the very start of their careers, others with a few important exhibitions under their belts. They live and work in different parts of the country, and are between 20 and 40 years old. Probe deeper, and a few common threads begin to emerge.
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