How Indian Techies Appreciate Art: India’s Biggest Artists Display their Art at Tech Park.

1,400 kg of stainless-steel sparkles in the sunlight in the heart of a business park, surrounded by staff members taking advantage of a pleasant day outside before returning to their offices. The large artwork, a 21-foot bucket filled to the capacity with kitchenware, is one of seven that have transformed Bengaluru's office area into a roomy open-air exhibition. 

Subodh Gupta, one of six renowned modern Indian artists, created the steel sculpture Dreams Overflowing, which is shown at RMZ Ecoworld. Nearly every work in the permanent collection is on exhibit outside and accessible to both the general public and staff members of businesses like Sony, Infosys, Honeywell, and Capgemini, to mention a few. 

People who are interested in modern art in India usually visit a gallery or a museum. A few of the well-known galleries in Bengaluru include Gallery Skye, Gallery Sumukha, Chitrakala Parishad, and National Gallery of Modern Art. While these traditional venues have their advantages, an outdoor exhibition enables the artist to create bigger and bolder pieces and is significantly more accessible to viewers. 

Priyanka Singh, who has been employed by the business park for more than six months, was seated next to Subodh Gupta's Dreams Overflowing with her colleague Nirmala Prasad when she noticed yet another individual posing for photos in front of the sculpture. “It's a terrific location for a selfie,” she remarked. 

Dharitri, a sculpture by Jayasri Burman, is on exhibit at RMZ Ecoworld. She picked a tranquil spot on the expansive deck of the business park. The work depicts the legendary feminine personification of earth, one of Burman's favorite topics. Additionally, the sculpture's placement outside properly accentuates how connected to nature the beautiful figure is. You can see the lovely blue sky through the artwork, according to Burman. 

Singh initially perceived Dhruva Mistry's Spatial Diagram, a red and vermillion mobile sculpture with outlines of the male and female body, as a woman juggling her professional and personal lives. She claimed that even while the artist's depiction ultimately did not support her viewpoint, it did not prevent her from coming to her own conclusion. “You are motivated to learn more about it”, she remarked. 

Since July, artworks have become an integral element of the environment of the industrial park. In addition to Dharitri, Dreams Overflowing, and Spatial Diagram, Arunkumar HG's The Link is displayed on the outside deck. Devi, a sculpture of a woman's head by G. Ravinder Reddy that serves as his most well-known creation, greets you as you enter the building. 

A second sculpture by Subodh Gupta, titled Thosa Pani, can be found near the entry. It is a wave-like form constructed of stainless-steel containers that looks to have been frozen in place above a motionless body of water. 

Paresh Maity, whose artwork The Force is displayed in the middle of the food court, remarked, "The exposure is enormous." The average number of visitors to a regular art gallery exhibition is about 5,000, but "with public art, perhaps 50,000 people will watch [the work] every day." 

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