Architecture as Muse | Group Exhibition at Sameksha, New Delhi

Address:
Sameksha Gallery, 60 Pandit Deendayal Upadhyay Marg, Mandi House, New Delhi – 110002
Date:
20 December 2025 – 17 January 2026
Opening time:
19 December 2025 | 6:30 PM – 8:30 PM Onwards
Timing:
11:00 AM – 6:30 PM
Entry:
Open for all

Architecture as Muse, opening today at Sameksha, New Delhi, brings together a compelling group of contemporary artists whose practices engage deeply with built environments, spatial memory, and the psychological resonance of architecture. Curated under the advisory vision of INTERSPACE, the exhibition unfolds architecture not merely as a physical structure but as an active agent—one that shapes perception, movement, and lived experience.

Perched high above the desert rests a fortress of burnished gold—a citadel whose centuries-old alleys and sun-warmed courtyards have housed generations of royalty, shopkeepers, artisans, and residents. Here, kitchens are lit at dawn, laundry lines flit across sun-bathed stone terraces, and rituals echo in its temples. It is no wonder
then that in 1968, when Satyajit Ray arrived to shoot Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne, he was charmed by the fort’s hospitality, its evocative architecture, and especially by how the yellow limestone walls glowed like molten gold in sunlight. Constrained by the monochrome film stock, however, he felt he had only hinted at its enchantment; and so, in 1973 he returned with colour, directing Sonar Kella, a celluloid adventure of his famous sleuth Feluda and a five-year-old child who claimed to have lived and died in a great siege here. For Ray, the fort became an actor itself: its stones, stories, and ongoing life forming the very spine of his imagination. This was memory made tangible, a labyrinth where history—of honour, of religion, of sacrifice—and imagination intertwined. He called this the ‘Golden Fort’; today, we know it better by its more common name: Jaisalmer.

Architecture has rarely remained about permanence; it has long been a conversation between the monumental and the makeshift, between the weight of history and the ephemeral ritual. Whether an ancient temple or a medieval garden; whether a bamboo ‘pandal’ or a modernist skyscraper, our built environment has always been porous, layered, and deeply entangled with the rhythms of history, culture, and community. This exhibition draws on that inheritance, presenting works of art that engage with architecture not as a static edifice, a backdrop of living space, but as a shifting terrain of memory, politics, and imagination.

Here, buildings become protagonists: where artists like Subhakar Tadi and Mallikarjun Katke utilise the use of black as a field that both envelops and unsettles. Rendered onto boulevards and facades, the colour becomes a metaphor for political opacity and social corrosion, where the city—and the human—itself appears “blackened” by systems of power. In contrast, Debojit Roy’s skeletal bamboo frameworks recall the provisional architectures of community festivals, those temporary structures (‘pandals’) that anchor collective life even as they vanish with time. Such gestures remind us that what appears fragile may, in fact, hold the deepest endurance. Elsewhere, Shashikanta Mohanty’s collages of ruins and reassembled fragments, and Vatsya Padia’s juxtaposition of forms, suggest the inevitability of deconstruction and the absorption of tradition, memory, and nostalgia onto brutalist concrete. This is well complimented by Shakeel Ahmad and Deepak’s repurposing of everyday ephemera; by using wood, metallurgical components, and the ubiquitous blue construction sheet, assemblages are created that emerge as both a surface and the subject, transformed from their utilitarian role into a site of reflection.

Together, these works resist any singular reading of our concrete landscape. Instead, they foreground the tensions that define architectures around us—between monument and scaffold, permanence and transience, concealment and exposure. They invite us to see our cities and dwellings not as neutral containers, but as fields charged with memory, vulnerability, and resilience. In doing so, they reframe architecture as a living archive: one that records the fractures of society, the persistence of community, and the imagination of futures yet to come.

Text: Shankar Tripathi

The curatorial advisory by INTERSPACE provides a conceptual framework that bridges architecture, art, and interdisciplinary inquiry. Known for fostering dialogues between spatial practice and visual culture, INTERSPACE situates this exhibition within a broader discourse on how architecture influences artistic methodologies and conceptual frameworks.

Architecture as Muse positions itself not as an exhibition about buildings, but about the experience of inhabiting space. It invites viewers to slow down, to observe how walls speak, how emptiness holds meaning, and how architecture continues to shape the human condition long after its functional purpose is fulfilled.

Opening today, this exhibition offers a timely reflection on the silent yet profound ways architecture permeates artistic imagination—making it not just a backdrop, but a muse.

Architecture as Muse | Group Exhibition at Sameksha, New Delhi

Navigate to Location