12 street artists transforming India's cities

 By 
Sonam Joshi
 on 
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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Street art is coming to India.

Already, street art festivals have taken place in Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Pune, Pondicherry and other cities, and around the country, artists are transforming public spaces using stencils, spray cans and paint.

From anonymous underground artists to community-based projects, these art initiatives are break new ground in India with their bold styles and ideas.

Ranjit Dahiya

Graphic designer and artist Ranjit Dahiya’s Bollywood Art Project pays tribute to Mumbai’s long association with Bollywood through murals of classic Hindi films. Their style is influenced by the dying tradition of hand-painted Hindi movie posters. Last year, Dahiya partnered with Delhi artist Yantr to paint India’s largest mural, depicting the father of Indian cinema, Dadasaheb Phalke.

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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Yantr

This street artist’s moniker ‘yantr’ means machine. Accordingly, most of his works such as flying chariots and masked figures are mechanical and larger-than-life. Yantr also dabbles in earth art, transforming vast landscapes into art.

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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Anpu Varkey

Trained as a painter, Anpu Varkey is known for her signature cat-themed murals which have found a place on the walls of cities including Delhi, Pune, Rishikesh and Chennai. In 2014, she collaborated with German graffiti artist Hendrik Beikirch to create the 158-feet-high Mahatma Gandhi mural at the Delhi Police Headquarters.

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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Harshvardhan Kadam

Artist Harshvardhan Kadam founded the Pune Street Art Project in 2012. Held in collaboration with local and visiting artists, it has helped transform the city’s oldest residential locality Kasba Peth into a colourful art hub.

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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Shilo Shiv Suleman

Bengaluru-based Suleman founded the Fearless Collective in 2012 to raise awareness about gender-based violence using art. Since then, it has travelled to cities such as Ahmedabad, Delhi and Varanasi, working with communities and artists to paint murals inspired by local traditions and culture.

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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Guesswho

The Kochi-based artist or collective’s identity remains mysterious, but his satirical pieces have acquired a popular following. Guesswho’s paste-ups are a mash-up of global icons and local culture -- think Harry Potter working on a potter’s wheel, Mr. Bean in a dhoti, and a sari-clad Mona Lisa. While they originally started to critique the Kochi Biennale, the works poke fun at gender stereotypes and Indian oddities.

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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Tyler

Mumbai’s anonymous street artist Tyler is known for his witty statements on everything from global politics and consumerism to local civic issues. The stencilled pieces reimagine familiar icons into satirical images.

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Baadal Nanjundaswamy

The Bengaluru artist shot to fame in June when he placed a life-sized green crocodile in the middle of the road to draw attention to an unattended pothole. Nanjundaswamy focuses on civic issues through his creative 3D paintings and sculptures. From placing lotuses in a water-logged road to painting portraits of gods to highlight open manholes, his interventions usually get civic problems fixed quickly.

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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Jheel Goradia

This Mumbai designer began the Breaking the Silence project, using popular Bollywood stereotypes to talk about gender injustice and the depiction of women in Hindi cinema. Each work is digitally reworked, printed and pasted, accompanied by hard-hitting dialogue that turns sexist stereotypes on their head.

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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Samir Parker

This year, Mumbai artist Samir Parker started the Roof/Tarp/City project to bring art to the city’s poorest and most neglected areas. Working with residents, Parker and his team installed colourful tarpaulin, a material commonly used to protect the houses from rain during the monsoon, on the roofs of several city slums. Seen from above, the resulting roofs look like an abstract patchwork of colour blocks.

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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Harsh Raman

Graphic designer Harsh Raman is behind Delhi-based street art initiatives such as the Brinda Project that highlighted the similarities between India and Brazil. He also started the Wall of Women project, which teams up female artists with women from Delhi’s neighbourhoods to paint city walls.

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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Leena Kejriwal

Photographer and artist Kejriwal’s Missing project aims to bring the issue of trafficking of women into India’s public spaces by combining art, activism and technology. The crowd-funded public art project places larger-than-life black silhouettes of ‘missing’ girls on streets and landmarks. People can interact with each piece through a mobile app, which sheds more light on the issue of trafficking of women and girls in India.

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