FEW DIFFERENT PUPPETS: from the past to the present....
Above: The puppet diva in purple is 'Basanti' created for fashion designer Tarun Tahiliani's show at the second India Fashion Week, and the puppet diva in pink is 'Selma' created for a Moorish theme event.
The white creature above is the Dutchess of Winter - created for a performance entitled 'Latex Bhujia' - (clearly adult puppetry)
The white diva suspended above was created for Fashion designer Rocky S's show at a Fashion week in 2007. (photograph by Mustafa Qureshi)
Above - green eyed 'Badsha' from 'Into the Box' - who independently visits a fashion show. (photograph by Tathagat Ray)
Happy the shaded puppet grooves to Sukhmani Malliks rustic pop Punjabi ballads (photograph by Rea Krishnatraye)
In black and white - an evening with 'Petroleum' a ribald character from the performance 'Dusk Bride Melodrama'. (photo by Kabir Singh)
Four views of a puppet installation done for Gandhi Smriti - the dandi march of the renouned 'gyarah murti' - or the picture behind the five hundred rupee note! (photographed by my dad!)
Above: The puppet diva in purple is 'Basanti' created for fashion designer Tarun Tahiliani's show at the second India Fashion Week, and the puppet diva in pink is 'Selma' created for a Moorish theme event.
The white creature above is the Dutchess of Winter - created for a performance entitled 'Latex Bhujia' - (clearly adult puppetry)
The white diva suspended above was created for Fashion designer Rocky S's show at a Fashion week in 2007. (photograph by Mustafa Qureshi)
Above - green eyed 'Badsha' from 'Into the Box' - who independently visits a fashion show. (photograph by Tathagat Ray)
Happy the shaded puppet grooves to Sukhmani Malliks rustic pop Punjabi ballads (photograph by Rea Krishnatraye)
In black and white - an evening with 'Petroleum' a ribald character from the performance 'Dusk Bride Melodrama'. (photo by Kabir Singh)
Four views of a puppet installation done for Gandhi Smriti - the dandi march of the renouned 'gyarah murti' - or the picture behind the five hundred rupee note! (photographed by my dad!)
No comments:
Post a Comment