By: Uttaran Das Gupta
Published in: *The Telegraph Online*
Date: January 4, 2026
Source:
https://www.telegraphindia.com/life/space-craft-the-art-of-curation-and-the-serendipity-arts-festival-prnt/cid/2140976
The art of curation and the Serendipity Arts Festival. The author reports
from Goa

At the Captains of Ports Jetty in Old Goa, a 450-foot-long barge was
anchored during the 10th edition of the Serendipity Arts Festival (SAF)
from December 12 to 21. Stepping onto it, you could see hammocks strung
across the hollowed-out cargo tank, all of it recalling a scene from Sergei
Eisenstein’s *Battleship Potemkin (1925)*. The barge was part of an
installation by French artist Julien Segard.

As the afternoon dissolved into dusk, a strobe light aimed its
uncompromising eye at the sky. This was part of Mumbai-based artist
Prajakta Potnis’s work *Elegy in Light*. Taking inspiration from historian
Ian Kumekawa’s 2025 book *Empty Vessel: The Story of the Global Economy in
One Barge*, it aimed to dismantle “power and control” by “projecting the
beam of light”. Said Potnis to me over the phone, “The light I’m using is
similar to the one you can see from the casinos on the Mandovi. These are
horrifying, extractive vessels..

Segard’s work as well as Potnis’s, along with several others, were part of
an exhibition titled The Barge, curated by artist and writer Veerangana
Solanki. Her curatorial vision and the interventions of the participating
artists had transformed the barge, often a symbol of extractive mining in
Goa, into a space for dialogue about migration, conflict and other troubles
roiling our world.

Since its first edition in 2016, the SAF has appointed some of India’s
leading musicians, dancers, artists, theatre-makers and writers as
curators. And in December 2025, celebrating its 10th year, it invited
several of the curators from previous editions, as well as some new ones,
taking the number past 40 — arguably the highest for any such event in the
world.

The variety that such a vast team of curators brought to the festival
could, at times, prove to be a little too much. “As first-time visitors, we
were initially overwhelmed,” said Sajida Carr, director of operations and
development at Creative Black Country, an arts and culture organisation in
West Midlands, the UK. “We learned rapidly to be selective about our
festival schedules,” she added.

Carr was visiting the SAF along with Parminder Dosanjh, who is creative
director at Creative Black Country. The events and exhibitions that she
said she enjoyed the most were Goa is a Bebinca, The Legends of Khasak and
There Are No Love Letters Here. While the first one, curated by chef Manu
Chandra, combined culinary arts with theatre to explore Goa’s layered
culture through the bebinca, a popular dessert, the second one, curated by
Anuradha Kapur, was a theatrical adaptation of the eponymous magic-realist
Malayalam novel by O.V. Vijayan. It was directed by Deepan Sivarman. There
Are No Love Letters Here was a photography project through which artist
Divya Cowasji explored her own family history. Curated by Prashant Panjiar
and Tanvi Mishra, it was housed in several rooms on the first floor of the
Old Goa Medical College and Hospital (Old GMC).

Like its previous editions, this year too the SAF used old colonial
buildings across Panjim as art spaces — the Old PWD, the Directorate of
Accounts and the Old GMC.

At the Directorate of Accounts building, in a room darkened by black
drapes, there was the Renaissance Italian artist Caravaggio’s 1606
painting *Mary
Magdalen in Ecstasy*.

Aesthetic transformation of space was not the only form of curation at the
festival. Some of the curators were also engaging in political acts of
inclusion. “The plays I chose this year had to be about gender, sexuality
or caste,” said Mumbai-based playwright Mahesh Dattani.

Among the plays curated by him were *Ottam* and *Kavan*. Written and
directed by Sapan Saran, *Ottam: Born to Run* tells the story of Akai
Amaran, a Paraiyar girl from rural Tamil Nadu, who has to battle
discrimination against her caste and transgender identity for athletic
fame. Directed by Abhishek Majumdar, *Kavan* is an Ambedkarite opera that
uses humour and music to cast a light on caste discrimination.

Hans Ulrich Obrist, arguably the most famous art curator in the world, once
described his work as being “a catalyst”, “an enabler”, “a sparring
partner”. In recent years, curators of festivals and museums have been seen
as powerful interlocutors in the world of the arts, responsible for
gatekeeping and at the same time, making art venues more accessible.

Goa-based poet and disability activist Salil Chaturvedi has been the
accessibility curator for the SAF since its last edition in 2024. Besides
ensuring that the venues of the SAF are made accessible for people with
disabilities, Chaturvedi also curated projects by disabled artists and
performers at the SAF’s 2025 edition.

One of the events he curated was Silent Rhythms, a performance of Indian
Sign Language poems and Visual Vernacular (VV). Developed in the 1960s by
deaf actor Bernard Bragg, VV uses expressive body language, facial
expressions and iconic signs to tell cinematic stories. The performance at
the SAF was led by Dr Alim Chandani, an activist for the deaf community and
mission leader for the Hear a Million collective. Using a mix of humour and
joie de vivre, the four performers managed to collapse the wall of silence
between the deaf community and others, making the festival space more
inclusive.

Reply via email to