In the storied landscape of Jaipur, where heritage is etched into pink sandstone and centuries of craftsmanship breathe through the streets, there existed a curious silence. It was not a silence of creativity—for the city is a living museum of tradition—but a quietude regarding the now. When Sana Rezwan returned to India in 2021, settling amidst this architectural grandeur, she identified a stark disconnection: the contemporary voice was missing from the public square.
Rezwan’s trajectory, moving from the high-velocity art world of New York—where she led The Art Lab Studio—back to the roots of Rajasthan, was not merely a relocation; it was a shift in perspective. In New York, she had witnessed art’s capacity to function as a civic utility, a force that disrupts and rebuilds social fabrics. Returning home, she found that while the past was revered, the future was inaccessible to young, emerging creators.
This realization became the genesis of the Public Arts Trust of India (PATI). Founded in 2022, the organization was conceived not as a mere gallery space, but as a bridge across the glaring chasm separating the elite art world from the everyday observer. Rezwan’s mission was to dismantle the notion of art as static decoration, proposing instead that it is an active agent of critical thought. “Art isn’t just a decoration; it has the power to spark conversations, challenge perceptions, and ignite social change,” she observes, articulating the ethos that would soon ripple through the arid landscapes of Rajasthan.
To manifest this vision, PATI established Jaipur Art Week, an initiative that transforms the city into a canvas for the avant-garde. Held annually between January and February, the event has evolved from a tentative project into a vital ecosystem.
Jawahar Kala Kendra. Exhibition space of Jaipur Art Week 3.0, Image Courtesy Public Arts Trust of India.
The venue, often the Jawahar Kala Kendra, becomes a crucible where the raw energy of emerging artists meets the gaze of the global community. The curation reflects a desire to disrupt the “stillness” of traditional appreciation. The theme “Avato Bairo Baje”—translating to “The Thunderous Roar of an Impending Storm”—captures this intent perfectly. It suggests that contemporary art in India is not a polite whisper, but a brewing atmospheric change, heavy with anticipation and the promise of rain in a dry land.
Within these exhibitions, the works selected often grapple with the friction between digital existence and physical reality. For instance, Nandan Ghiya’s Varaha As a Labourer presents a visual glitch in the matrix of mythology. By intertwining the sacred iconography of the Varaha avatar with the aesthetic of digital decay, the work questions the commodification of heritage in the information age.
Nandan Ghiya. Installation still of Varaha As a Labourer by Nandan Ghiya. Image Courtesy by the Artist.
Rezwan’s approach to curation is deeply democratic but intellectually rigorous. She creates space for works that demand engagement rather than passive viewing. Mansie Shah’s Body Language serves as another anchor in this dialogue, deconstructing form and posture to investigate how bodies occupy and negotiate space. By placing such works in the public domain, Rezwan ensures that the “contemporary” is not a luxury import, but a local dialect being spoken by a new generation.
Mansie Shah. Image still of Body Language by Mansie Shah. Image Courtesy by the Artist.
The scope of PATI extends beyond exhibition walls and into the visceral reality of education. Recognizing that appreciation requires literacy, Rezwan spearheaded the Creative Arts Education Program in collaboration with Learning Through Arts Narrative and Discourse (LAND).
This initiative targets the grassroots level—government schools in Jodhpur—where art education was previously nonexistent. By engaging over 200 schoolchildren, the program does not aim to churn out painters, but to foster critical thinking. The results, manifested in improved attendance and grades, validate Rezwan’s belief that art is a cognitive tool. It empowers the youngest members of society to analyze their environment and culture, turning them from spectators into participants.
Harshit Agrawal. Image still of (un)still life print by Harshit Agrawal. Image Courtesy by the Artist
The philosophy guiding Rezwan is an inheritance of character. She cites her father, Rezwan Razack, as the architect of her leadership style, one that balances a relentless work ethic with profound compassion. This human-centric approach informs the advisory board of PATI and the mentorship structures she builds. It is less about institutional power and more about the “cross-pollination of ideas.”
This international outlook is crucial. Through residency programs in Jodhpur, PATI invites global artists to collaborate with local artisans. It is a dialogue of technique and concept—where the hand of the traditional craftsman meets the conceptual framework of the international visitor.
Nishant Ghiya. Image still of Idhar Udhar by Nishant Ghiya. Image Courtesy by the Artist.
Rezwan’s personal connection to art remains the emotional core of her public efforts. She speaks of Zarina Hashmi’s Home Is a Foreign Place as a seminal influence. The work’s exploration of displacement and the geometry of memory resonates with Rezwan’s own journey between New York and India. It reinforces the idea that art, at its peak, is a universal language of belonging—or the longing for it.
The visual language of the exhibitions continues to reflect this diversity of thought. In Idhar Udhar by Nishant Ghiya, and other featured installations, there is a recurring motif of fragmentation and reconstruction—a fitting metaphor for a society in rapid transition.
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Nishchay Thakur. Image still of Land-And-And-And by Nishchay Thakur. Image Courtesy by the Artist.
As PATI looks toward the future, the ambition scales upward. Rezwan has already set her sights on Jaipur Art Week Edition 5.0 in 2026, announcing an Open Call Selection Jury comprised of prominent art world figures. This long-term planning indicates stability and a commitment to institutionalizing these platforms. The goal is to create a sustainable infrastructure where bold ideas can survive the initial spark of creation.
The installation Locked In by Wolf and the ethereal Altars and Altered States by Ayushi Patni demonstrate the caliber of work PATI champions—immersive, tactile, and psychologically resonant.
Wolf. Installation still of Locked In, 2023 by Wolf, Image Courtesy Public Arts Trust of India.
Ultimately, Sana Rezwan is redefining the role of the cultural patron in modern India. She is not merely collecting; she is cultivating. By placing contemporary art in the path of the public, she asserts that culture is not a static heritage to be preserved in glass cases, but a living, breathing entity that must evolve. In the heat of Jaipur, amidst the echoes of history, she is ensuring that the future has a voice, and that it roars.
Ayushi Patni. Installation still of Altars and Altered States, 2023 by Ayushi Patni, Image Courtesy Public Arts Trust of India.
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