Takshni Wall Art- Transforming Empty Walls into a Focal Point

July 25, 2025

jiva

Wall Art by Takshni 

Material Memory and Contemporary Expression

A wall does not simply wait to be filled. It holds quiet potential, offering a space where memory, feeling, and form can come together. At Takshni, wall art is approached with this awareness. It is not added as an afterthought, but created as an act of intention. Each piece carries within it a sense of presence. It brings together the essence of what is remembered and what is made, allowing the space around it to come alive.

The wall installations at Takshni emerge through a slow and mindful process. Textured metals, hand-shaped wood, and layered canvas hold the careful marks of the maker’s hand. Works such as Sindoor, Kalpavriksha, Shrinathji, and Natraj are created through close dialogue between artists, artisans, and curators. They are composed with care and depth, shaped to hold meaning that can be felt as much as seen. Each piece is rooted in the language of craft and draws from the cultural imagination while responding to the present moment.

These artworks invite a quiet attention. Surfaces carry layers—brass that has been gently weathered, threads knotted with memory, ghungroos that once held sound. The materials come together in a way that invites reflection. What is created is not a product but a relationship. The work belongs to the space, and yet it always carries something larger.

Featured Work: Natraj
A tribute to rhythm, renewal, and divine presence

Among the pieces at Takshni, Natraj speaks with a certain stillness and strength. It is shaped in brass and detailed with beads, wire, and ghungroos. Behind it, a hand-painted canvas gives depth to the form. The surface carries the warmth of a brown patina, holding time within its layers. In its form, Natraj honours the rhythm of life that moves through creation, dissolution, and return.

This work is not created to impress but to hold presence. It brings with it the energy of ritual, the clarity of gesture, and the sense of something sacred held in form. Whether placed in a home or in a shared space, Natraj becomes more than art on the wall. It becomes part of the atmosphere, inviting stillness, attention, and feeling.

Each piece at Takshni is shaped with time and care. There is no haste in its making. The process is slow, guided by conversation, trust, and memory. What emerges is a work that holds its own place in the world, speaking quietly to those who encounter it.