Exhibitions

This is Not Street Art
St+art’s first experiential exhibition was hosted at a defunct shop in Hauz Khas Village which had been shut for over 5 years. The raw and grungy vibe of the space complimented the diverse practices of the artists - both out in public space and in-studio, creating an informal and approachable setting for an experiential exhibition. A diverse range of people across different backgrounds visited the exhibition across one month which hosted several talks, screenings and music performances.

#WIP: The Street Art Show
Designed as a walk-through experiential exhibition, the ‘#WIP: The Street Art Show’ was hosted in the unconventional space of Inland Container Depot - Tughlakabad (ICD-TKD) for 40 days. 31,200 square feet of ICD was transformed into a walk-through exhibition by using 100 shipping containers, using over 1,000 liters of paint and 20,000 working hours by 25 national and international artists. Through #WIP, we created an art-hub in an unexpected space to offer diverse sectors of society newer experiences, especially to people who were usually excluded from the reach of art. By the end of the project, more than 20,000 visitors had visited the exhibition.





Sassoon Dock Art Project
The Sassoon Dock Art Project was an experiential exhibition organised in the unconventional space of one of the busiest docks in the city of Mumbai - the Sassoon Docks. The 144-year-old site was converted into an urban art exhibition, which remapped the DNA of Mumbai, for two months.The exhibition hosted artists to create installations, audio-visual experiences, murals, screenings and curated tours that were site-specific. It was an attempt to encourage the city’s residents to understand and take note of the cultural and historical significance of the space and its inhabitants.

F(r)iction at Kona
At F(r)iction - an immersive walkthrough experience at a space called Kona in Jor Bagh, 17 Indian and international artists created site-specific installations, videos, interactive multimedia pieces and murals around the interaction and overlap amidst effects of technology, art, culture, and alternate realities to transform the venue of Kona in a parallel universe of ‘frictions and fictions’.