Gallery Dotwalk Opens New Delhi Space with Immersive Multi-Sensory Exhibition
- Style Essentials Edit Team

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Gallery Dotwalk inaugurates its new space in Defence Colony, New Delhi with Drifting Through Quiet Veins, an immersive exhibition that reimagines the gallery as a sensorial environment where sound, material, and image converge. The exhibition brings together eight contemporary artists whose practices move beyond conventional studio formats into experiential encounters shaped by memory, labour, landscape, and embodied presence.
The exhibition features Abdulla PA, Amjum Rizve, Chandrashekar Koteshwar, Mehak Garg, Priyaranjan Purkait, and Sudhayadas S, alongside Ravinder Reddy and Sujith SN, two long-associated voices who have played a significant role in the gallery’s journey. Together, the artists explore the quiet, often overlooked rhythms of daily life, creating works that invite slower modes of looking, listening, and inhabiting space.

With the opening of its new space, Dotwalk enters a pivotal new chapter that reflects the gallery’s sustained growth and long-term vision. Grounded in artistic rigour and committed to nurturing artists over time, the relocation strengthens Dotwalk’s presence within India’s contemporary art landscape while expanding its dialogue with audiences, institutions, and the city’s evolving cultural ecosystem.
Sreejith CN, Director of Gallery Dotwalk, shares, “As Dotwalk begins this new phase in Delhi, the gallery also looks ahead to an exciting year of exhibitions and curated experiences, expanding the ways in which audiences can experience art across disciplines and formats.”

Curated as a durational walk through interconnected zones, the exhibition transforms the architecture into a breathing organism. Visitors encounter Abdulla PA’s dark room installation, where objects and reflective surfaces create a space of quiet contemplation and spectral presence. Mehak Garg presents paintings of domestic interiors alongside a sound installation recording conversations among women in domestic spaces, amplifying the ambient textures of home and memory.
Amjum Rizve displays intricate paintings, drawings, and photographs alongside a working table scattered with pigments and materials, offering insight into his process rooted in Persian embroidery traditions and material experimentation. Priyaranjan Purkait, who originates from a fishing hamlet in the Sundarbans, constructs an installation of nets, photographs, and sculptural elements that map the fragile ecology and labour of the delta.

The exhibition also features characteristic works by Sujith SN, Chandrashekar Koteshwar, Sudhayadas S, and Ravinder Reddy, each contributing distinct voices to the exhibition’s meditation on place, materiality, time, and embodied experience.
“The exhibition invites visitors to drift rather than scan — to listen, touch, and linger within spaces that hold memory and sensation,” says Sreejith CN. “By moving beyond conventional presentation, we hope to create an environment where art becomes a shared experience of quiet witnessing.”
Exhibition Details
Drifting Through Quiet Veins
Gallery Dotwalk, Defence Colony, New Delhi
Preview: 31 January 2026, 6 PMOn view: February 2026
Timings: 11 AM – 8 PM, Monday to Saturday
Sunday by appointment only
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