Wood, brass, drawing on rice paper, metal/plastic flowers, acrylic on wall, brass shirt design
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156 x 120 inches
Vikrant (b. 1992, Delhi) is a visual artist whose practice interrogates the invisible architectures of belonging—examining emotional borders, political fictions, and the fragile constructs we call home. Central to their practice are two questions: What constitutes the existence of a home? And what does it mean to possess one? These inquiries anchor a cross-generational dialogue, exploring home as both a phenomenological reality and a psychological weight. Vikrant challenges
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Vikrant (b. 1992, Delhi) is a visual artist whose practice interrogates the invisible architectures of belonging—examining emotional borders, political fictions, and the fragile constructs we call home. Central to their practice are two questions: What constitutes the existence of a home? And what does it mean to possess one? These inquiries anchor a cross-generational dialogue, exploring home as both a phenomenological reality and a psychological weight. Vikrant challenges binaries of fact/fiction and belonging/homelessness, revealing the fragile architectures of identity.
He completed his BFA in 2016 and MFA in 2018 from the College of Art, New Delhi. In 2021, Vikrant held His first solo exhibition, Lost in Translation (2021), presented by Prameya Art Foundation as part of the PRAF Discover Series. His work has been showcased internationally, including Transitions and Transformations at Palazzo Bembo, Venice (2022), Call to Disorder at Serendipity Arts Festival, Goa, and Castelnuovo Fotografia in Rome. He has also exhibited at Proyector in Madrid with Indus Art Collective.
Vikrant’s research-based project Family Memories was featured in the Italian newspaper Alias II Manifesto, and his practice has been critically examined in The Impulse to Remember by Annalisa Mansukhani (ASAP). He participated in Peers Share at Khoj International Artists’ Association (2023), and was a resident at Next Step Residency, One Shanthi Road, Bengaluru (2019).
Through his multidisciplinary approach, Vikrant continues to navigate identity, displacement, and the evolving meaning of “home.”