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Delhi Metro Stations To Get Colourful Makeover As Platform For Artists And Photographers

Delhi Metro Stations To Display Art And Digital Works
NEW DELHI, INDIA - NOVEMBER 22: The first metro train with advertisement in its exterior part will be inducted into service on November 22, 2014 in New Delhi, India. This move is aimed at augmenting its non-operational revenues. The DMRC operates a fleet of over 200 trains at present with over 60 eight-coach trains and over 80 six-coach trains whose interiors have already been made available for the purpose of advertising. (Photo by Subrata Biswas/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)
Hindustan Times via Getty Images
NEW DELHI, INDIA - NOVEMBER 22: The first metro train with advertisement in its exterior part will be inducted into service on November 22, 2014 in New Delhi, India. This move is aimed at augmenting its non-operational revenues. The DMRC operates a fleet of over 200 trains at present with over 60 eight-coach trains and over 80 six-coach trains whose interiors have already been made available for the purpose of advertising. (Photo by Subrata Biswas/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)

Travelling by the Delhi Metro can now be now a visual treat with a number of public artworks and photographs lined up at select metro stations in the city.

Beginning from January 15, a series of lightboxes at two metro stations -- Jor Bagh and the Mandi House -- would be filled with artworks that range from photographs, artprints as well as video and digital works. Text in both English and Hindi accompany the artworks, that is expected to change every three months.

"IHC has always been in forefront of creating programming that has a mass appeal. In a new policy initiative, we have decided to now take art to public spaces and our collaboration with Delhi Metro is the first step in that direction," says Rakesh Kacker, Director, IHC.

The project, a collaboration between the India Habitat Centre and the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation is part of the former's "The Habitat Initiative: Art in Public Spaces."

"Community art refers to field of community, neighbourhood and public art practice with roots in social justice and popular and informal education methods. The IHC initiative, was to work in the genre of community arts, primarily using photographs, prints, video and digital works," says Alka Pande, who curated the project.

For three months beginning January, at the Jor Bagh metro station, photographs from the exhibition, "The Long Exposure at Udaipur, 1857-1957", would be displayed on three lightboxes.

Nearly 20 prints of some photographs from this collection would also be displayed on the walls. Displayed images includes "Painted Photographs" or hand-coloured photographs and portraits from three generations of Maharanas who ruled Mewar from 1884 to 1995.

In the month of March, which sees a celebration of Holi, the Mandi House station will features photographs on the festival of colours by Tarun Chhabra, says the curator.

"I like to celebrate people, places and culture through my photography. My choice of subject comes from a place of intuition and is fuelled by an impetuous desire to partake in the stories that unfold around me," says Chhabra.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.