Workshops

Drawing The Unseen

2026-07-13 16:56:11

Anjali Pujari

Drawing The Unseen

When

July 18, 2026    
11:00 am - 1:00 pm

Inspired by Beneath the Turning Sky, Drawing the Unseen is a workshop led by Anjali Pujari for Deaf adults that invites participants to engage with the exhibition through slow looking, reflection, and creative exploration.

Moving beyond the search for a single meaning, the workshop encourages participants to observe details such as lines, shapes, textures, patterns, and empty spaces, while reflecting on themes of memory, ecology, interconnectedness, and imagination. Through guided prompts, participants will consider what cannot always be seen but can be sensed, remembered, or imagined.

Responding to the exhibition using a range of art materials, each participant will create an individual artwork that reflects their own observations and experiences. The workshop celebrates multiple ways of seeing, making, and interpreting, creating an inclusive space for creativity, conversation, and personal expression.

Designed specifically for Deaf adults, Drawing the Unseen,  offers an opportunity to connect with art at an unhurried pace and discover new ways of relating to the world through observation, imagination, and making.

For ISL translation, please click here.


Anjali Pujari

Facilitator

Anjali Pujari is an interdisciplinary artist, educator and ecological storyteller from the Western Ghats of Karnataka. Working across drawing, sculpture, sound and participatory art, her practice explores the relationships between ecology, memory, disability and more-than-human worlds through sensory and collective experiences. She is particularly known for her intricate chalk carvings of insects, ephemeral sculptures that invite closer attention to the fragile lives and overlooked beauty of the natural world.

Over the past few years, Anjali has designed and facilitated inclusive arts-based learning experiences with neurodivergent children, young adults and diverse communities, creating spaces where observation, curiosity and making become ways of thinking together. Through her workshops and artistic practice, she invites people to slow down, notice the unseen and imagine new ways of relating to each other and the living world.