Block Printing Workshop
Collaborative textile printing where visitors self-print and experience the pressure, pigment, rhythm, and reveal of the process.
The exhibition is organised as a sequence of craft experiences, material and cultural explorations, and one immersive spatial installation.
The experience moves from hands-on making to material interpretation, then into a contemplative spatial encounter. Each moment is participatory, but refined: visitors do not simply watch culture, they engage with process, texture, script, scent, sound, and vibration.
The old zone-based structure has been replaced with categories that better fit the new premium exhibition direction.
Collaborative textile printing where visitors self-print and experience the pressure, pigment, rhythm, and reveal of the process.
Live clay making and storytelling through craft, showing how form, hand, earth, and memory come together.

Indian language exploration through writing, stencils, and visitor participation.
A contemporary draping exploration that treats the saree as sculptural fabric, gesture, and personal styling.

A sustainable styling experience focused on fashion experimentation and personal expression.
A participatory wall installation where visitors contribute through sticker placement.

A temporary adornment station exploring identity, intimacy, and symbolic placement.

Spices are framed as material culture: agricultural heritage, colour, texture, and global trade significance.

Natural perfumery traditions, material ingredients, craftsmanship, memory, and cultural storytelling through fragrance history.

Beauty and wellness traditions presented through ingredient exploration and material heritage.

Instrument-making craftsmanship, rhythm, materiality, performance traditions, visitor interaction, and tactile sound exploration.

An immersive tunnel exploring origin, vibration, sensory transition, and spatial philosophy. The installation acts as a quiet threshold: visitors move through architecture-inspired experiential storytelling before returning to the wider exhibition with a different sense of attention.
Its role is not decorative. It creates a pause for reflection through light, enclosure, resonance, and the felt memory of sound.