Poging GOUD - Vrij

Climate story on our plates

Financial Express Hyderabad

|

February 08, 2026

The third edition of Sustaina India approaches the climate crisis through food systems and fruiting cycles

- SUGANDHA MUKHERJEE

THE THIRD EDITION of Sustaina India, titled Bitter Nectar, unfolds as a quiet but insistent meditation on climate change, one that refuses spectacle. Instead. it embeds itself in the most intimate of routines. Eating, cooking, carrying, and waiting.

Curated by Jiten Thukral and Sumir Tagra, the Delhi-based artist duo whose practice spans painting, archiving, gaming, publishing, and long-term engagement with ecology and climate change, Sustaina India, on till February 14 at Bikaner House, New Delhi, approaches the climate crisis through food systems and fruiting cycles.

"Food is the base of what we do," says Tagra. "We connect with people or what we have thrice a day... it is basic, very much rooted into our day's routine." Food, for Tagra, is not an entry point chosen for symbolism but for necessity. "We also understand the food is very much related to the economy and the part and parcel that I have to eat to fill my stomach." Because food sits at the intersection of care, labour, culture, and survival, even subtle disruptions become deeply felt. "Taste changes and the dialect changes... each house has a particular kind of a cooking... as many religions and as many people and as many ways how we see it, it shifts you know."

The exhibition's title holds that unease—Bitter Nectar is deliberately contradictory. "Yes, it is. It doesn't sit well because we are actually stuck between the right and the wrong," Tagra says. The discomfort mirrors contemporary life, living with pollution, dependence on contested technologies, and growing uncertainty around what we consume. "What do you eat at this time when everything is shifting its taste or not?" he asks. "Why the nectar is bitter... what happens if the sweetness is changing its taste?" Dietary changes, lactose intolerance, altered crops, and unstable harvests are not hypothetical futures. "This is a time where the bitterness is actually coming from our heart."

MEER VERHALEN VAN Financial Express Hyderabad

Financial Express Hyderabad

Manappuram Finance gets RBI nod for Bain Capital joint control

MANAPPURAM FINANCE HAS received the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) final approval for the proposed acquisition of joint control and 41.66% shareholding in the company’s paid-up equity capital and convertible instruments by Bain Capital.

time to read

1 min

February 15, 2026

Financial Express Hyderabad

Motorcycle powerhouse Hero's scooter push picks up speed

Vida VX2-led electric strategy lifts market share

time to read

1 mins

February 15, 2026

Financial Express Hyderabad

AI versus doctors

What is AI really good for when it comes to medicine?

time to read

3 mins

February 15, 2026

Financial Express Hyderabad

Global honchos to get a taste of desi tech

OFFICIALS EXPECT TOTAL footfalls to exceed two lakh over five days of the summit starting Monday.

time to read

1 min

February 15, 2026

Financial Express Hyderabad

Assam gets projects worth over ₹5,500 cr

Projects aim to boost connectivity, improve digital infrastructure

time to read

2 mins

February 15, 2026

Financial Express Hyderabad

Jaishankar reaffirms support for UNSC reform

EXTERNAL AFFAIRS MINISTERS Jaishankar on Saturday met his counterparts from the G7 countries as he reiterated India's support for reform of the UN Security Council (UNSC) at the Munich Security Conference.

time to read

1 min

February 15, 2026

Financial Express Hyderabad

Our interests foremost in foreign policy: Rahman

IN HIS FIRST remarks since winning the elections with a landslide majority, Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) chief Tarique Rahman, who is tipped to become the Prime Minister, underlined Saturday that he would keep in mind the \"interests of Bangladesh\" and \"protecting the interests of the people of the country\" while deciding his foreign policy.

time to read

1 min

February 15, 2026

Financial Express Hyderabad

The cost of unfinished ambition

An unsentimental account of entrepreneurial adversity

time to read

4 mins

February 15, 2026

Financial Express Hyderabad

IN THE FAST LANE

From just 93 km in 2014 to 3,052 km at present—with plans to increase the network to 26,000 km by 2033 —how expressways and access-controlled high-speed corridors are going to rewrite the next chapter of India’s infra story

time to read

8 mins

February 15, 2026

Financial Express Hyderabad

A celestial message

Art is increasingly adorning space. Is it art, or just space junk?

time to read

3 mins

February 15, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size