At Lalit Kala Akademi Kalyani Pramod translates photographs into textile art
The Hindu
Explore Kalyani Pramod's textile art exhibition at Lalit Kala Akademi, honoring her father's legacy through woven memories and everyday moments.
When I walk into textile artist Kalyani Pramod’s Chennai studio, she is sipping tea, surrounded by framed textile and paper works and photographs arranged carefully around the room. They are ready to be packed and sent to Lalit Kala Akademi, the venue for her ongoing exhibition, Tribute to My Father, a personal homage to her father, the late photojournalist TS Nagarajan.
“We were rich not through money but rich through experiences,” Kalyani says, reflecting on a childhood shaped by immersion in the arts. From the age of seven, she travelled across the country with her father, accompanying him to exhibitions and on assignments that placed her inside a world of photographers, dancers and artists. “I think I’ve become a designer because of him and his friends. We had artists of different kinds coming home, and it opened to me a new world,” she says.
For the exhibition, she has selected a few of her father’s photographs from the negatives she has preserved and digitised over the years. Displayed alongside each image are her textile and paper interpretations — woven tapestries, miniature embroideries and delicate works on tea-stained paper that echo the original compositions. In total, 82 pieces are on display, forming a visual dialogue between photograph, thread and memory.
Among the works are woven tapestries in silk and wool, miniature black-and-white embroideries and portraits stitched onto used tea bags. The tea bags are opened and repurposed as canvas. “If you take your needle through the tea bag and you made a mistake, you can’t correct it. It just tears,” she says, describing the care the process demands.
Using tea bags as her canvas is also her way of repurposing waste. An advocate of working with discarded material, Kalyani often collects what others throw away. Piles of textile scraps and salvaged odds and ends are a familiar sight in her studio, waiting to be reimagined into art.
Notably, Kalyani has deliberately avoided her father’s portraits of well-known personalities. Though Nagarajan photographed political figures and public names, she has chosen instead to focus on his images of everyday life, priests, vendors, women seated along the ghats, unnamed faces caught in mundane moments.

Machattu Mamangam 2026 was celebrated on February 17 at Thiruvanikkavu Bhagavathy Temple in Thrissur, Kerala, drawing thousands to witness the iconic Kuthirakolam procession. Villagers carried towering poikuthiras across post-harvest paddy fields as Panchavadyam marked the grand procession, followed by the energetic Kuthirakkali ritual. The five-day temple festival, led by the Thekkumkara division, stood out for its strong community participation and elephant-free celebrations.












