Artistry in Flow - Threads Beyond Duality

Kolam Art: A Pathway to Inner Flow and Inner Peace, through balance and Harmony.

Kolam means Beauty in Tamil language. It’s all about creating beauty and balance in life.

Kolam is more than an art form – it is a living, breathing practice of connection, rhythm, and flow. Rooted in ancient Tamil traditions, the word Kolam carries deep significance:

  • Ko represents ascension – the rising breath, the aspiration toward something greater.
  • Lam is the grounding force, linked to the Muladhara (Root) Chakra, anchoring us to the earth, the body, and the present moment.

Kolam is the manifestation of an ascending aspiration into form, a dance between structure and spontaneity, spirit and matter. It is both a prayer and a play – an invitation to align with the natural rhythms of life.

A Moving Meditation

Drawn with rice flour or chalk powder, Kolam is created through a fluid motion, an extension of breath and movement. The fingertips become instruments of expression, pouring patterns onto the earth, mirroring the cycles of creation and dissolution. The arms move in a rhythmic, pendulum-like dance, tracing geometric shapes and sacred symbols that hold the essence of balance, harmony, and interconnectedness.

Within Kolam, we find a universe of sacred geometry, fractals, number sequences, and vibrational frequencies—a visual language that transcends words. It is not just an art form but an embodied practice of presence, mindfulness, and relational flow.

Kolam is more than a pattern; it is a portal—an ephemeral gateway between the seen and unseen, the past and the yet-to-be. Through my art, I explore the fluid nature of transition, the delicate balance between impermanence and presence. Like a breath suspended before the next inhale, each line and curve in a Kolam embodies the tension between movement and stillness, the quiet anticipation of transformation.

I see Kolam as a reflection of life’s unfolding—a continuous dialogue between what was and what could be. Its rhythmic repetitions mirror the cycles of creation and dissolution, reminding us that change is both inevitable and sacred. Through the interplay of form and emptiness, symmetry and spontaneity, my art evokes the emotions that arise in moments of shift—hope, resistance, surrender, and renewal.

I am drawn to the fragile beauty of ephemeral art, its impermanence defying ownership, its presence an offering to the moment. Each Kolam I create is a meditation on transience, a ritual of letting go, and an invitation to step into the unknown with trust. It is in this space—between structure and flow, tradition and reinvention—that I seek to express the unspoken, to bridge the ancestral with the intuitive, and to invite communion with the unseen forces that shape our becoming.

Traditional kolams are constructed using dot grids often arranged in hexagonal formations, beginning at the center and gradually reducing outward on all sides. This structure generates symmetry, rhythm, and spatial balance while allowing continuous variation. Within this framework, I work with diamond and circular forms as modular units—circles representing continuity and flow, and diamonds introducing direction, tension, and structure.

For this body of work, I deconstruct culturally significant symbols such as the peacock, temple gopuram, and ceremonial chariot, reducing them to their essential geometric components. These forms are rendered through a single, continuous line that weaves through the dot matrix, representing the sacred thread that interconnects all forms. With no beginning and no end, the line reflects infinite flow, cyclical time, and energy in motion.

The dot functions as a point of awareness; the line becomes movement itself. Together, they position geometry not as static abstraction, but as a living language—one that organizes space while remaining fluid and responsive. By bridging ancestral pattern systems with contemporary abstraction, my work contributes to ongoing explorations of shape, form, and space, offering geometry as a universal framework for interconnectedness.

Kolam is an encoded geometric language- where each dot represents awareness and each line carries movement, memory, and intention. These works explore how boundaries, when rooted in love, become bridges back to ourselves.

 

Embody Every Version of You

Feminine Sovereignty + Identity (Portraits) Series

Embody Every Version of You – Sovereign Bloom: A Journey Through Archetypal Integration

My portrait series Embody Every Version of You explores the archetypes that live within us all—the Maiden, Warrior, Empress, and Sovereign – each holding both shadow and light. These figures reflect the fluidity of identity and the reclamation of voice through self-recognition.

Rather than presenting archetypes as fixed roles, I approach them as living energies that evolve across time, experience, and embodiment. Each portrait becomes a mirror, inviting viewers to witness the parts of themselves shaped by innocence and desire, protection and resilience, leadership and nurturance, autonomy and wisdom. Together, these archetypes form a continuum rather than a hierarchy, revealing wholeness through integration rather than perfection.

Sovereign Bloom centers the body as a site of remembrance and becoming. Through gaze, posture, and symbolic patterning, the figures embody agency, softness, and strength simultaneously. The work emphasizes that sovereignty is not domination, but coherence – an inner alignment that emerges when all facets of the self are acknowledged and allowed to coexist.

This series offers archetypal integration as an act of healing and reclamation, particularly within feminine and diasporic narratives. By honoring every version of the self, the work gestures toward a future where identity is not fragmented or suppressed, but lived fully- rooted, expressive, and self-authorized.

Boundaries as Bridges

Kolam(Sacred Geometry)Series

Where belonging begins.

Inspired by Kolam — a South Indian art of pattern, rhythm, and renewal — this series explores how boundaries can protect, guide, and open us.
These forms map the emotional geometries that shape our relationships — with self, with others, with spirit.

This series draws from the Tamil ritual art of kolam — a daily practice of drawing geometric patterns at the threshold of the home.
Traditionally, kolam marks the boundary between inside and outside, self and world, offering protection, welcome, and blessing.

In this body of work, I reinterpret kolam as a map of inner belonging.

Through lines, loops, knots, and mirrored patterns, I explore how boundaries can either confine us or return us to ourselves.
When rooted in fear, boundaries become walls.
When rooted in love, they become bridges back to our essence.

These works invite the viewer to slow down, listen inwardly, and experience the sacred balance between structure and flow, separation and communion, autonomy and connection.

 

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