Saichi presents Pauses, Renderings and the Quiet Blooms, a wearable art exhibition by textile artist Maneesha Sharma, on view from February 9 to 10 at Travancore Palace, Copernicus Marg, New Delhi, with a media preview on February 9 from 5:00 PM onwards.
Rooted in stillness and intuition, the exhibition unfolds as a quiet meditation on time, nature, and mindful making. Sharma approaches textile not merely as material, but as a living surface—one that absorbs memory, silence, and reflection, inviting viewers to slow down and engage with fabric as an intimate experience.
A free-spirited and intuitive practitioner, Sharma’s creative process is shaped by pauses—moments of watching, listening, and allowing form to emerge organically. Her works resist urgency and excess, instead carrying an effortless authenticity that grows from attentiveness to material and process. “My work begins with pausing and listening—to nature, to memory, to silence,” she says. “The fabric already knows what it wants to become.”
With a practice spanning nearly four decades across interiors, furniture, accessories, and art textiles, Sharma brings a disciplined yet instinctive approach to her work. Moving fluidly between painting, embroidery, and resist dyeing, she allows texture and material to guide the narrative, leaving visible traces of time, labour, and mindful craftsmanship.
At the heart of the exhibition are sarees conceived as meditative landscapes—earth songs rendered through fluid forms, cosmic motifs, text, poetry, and prose. These six-yard compositions transcend function to become wearable artworks, gently guiding the wearer into a space of calm and conscious presence.
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Pauses, Renderings and the Quiet Blooms offers art as an experience rather than an object—one that unfolds gradually and provides a quiet refuge from the pace of contemporary life.
When: February 9–10
Where: Travancore Palace, Copernicus Marg, New Delhi
