The works mentioned below are a series of works, which were then observed realities of my surroundings in 2018. When I observed the riverbank in my city, and wherever I travelled, I made sure to observe nearby riverbanks in the cities I visited. I visited Hyderabad and a few parts of Andhra Pradesh to see and observe flood prone area, and it happened to be my luck that I was in the city where the flood had just passed and was able to compare the situations of places after the flood. They all looked the same to me since there is a universal iconography which I have found in these series of work where the branches and bushes are replaced by leaves and flowers with plastic and synthetic cloth pieces; both of them are insoluble in water or by any natural form, they are basically non-perishable.

The River Road Medium: Acrylic and Oil on Canvas Year: 2021 Size: 72* 60 inches.

ANYWHERE EVERYWHERE. Size: 31”x 41”. Medium: Acrylic and oil on canvas. Year: 2020 Crocodile, No Crocodile

Crocodile, No Crocodile. Size:78” x 49”. Year:2022 This feeling of finding ‘pleasure in disgust ‘ turns out to be a universal archetype in humans. Eventually it becomes a reflective tool for the viewers to navigate the entanglement of their self through the turbulence and chaos portrayed in my works.

Title: Untitled. Size: 23“x 14” Medium: Acrylic and oil on canvas pasted on board. Year : 2022

Title: 'Untitled' Size: 20 x 12 Size Medium: Acrylic and oil on canvas pasted on board. Year: 2022

Once upon a time, there was a River in Baroda. Size: 72*x 96* Year: 2022.

The river bank series is an attempt to depict the chaos and destruction that pervaded the urban Landscape of Baroda during the 2019 flood, where my prime focus is the Vishwamitri river as it flows right through the heart of the city