Visual Corner
These artworks focus on sexuality, bodily autonomy, and the importance of a pleasure-affirming approach to sexuality. Women’s bodies are considered…
In this fun and hilarious short video, watch Simmi’s mother’s reaction when Simmi returns home with a ‘baby’. Cover Image:…
This art collection bears the evocative title “Aching Palates”. Within its realm, each artwork embodies an emblematic act that accompanies…
As human beings, we like to share our love through food where cooking for someone else becomes a profound act…
Duration: 2015 – ongoingMedium: Albumen Prints from digital negatives. I was perceived as too ‘feminine’ throughout my adolescence. I faced…
Body is born, as a collection of many parts, into the various collections of bodies. Different combinations or collections are projected onto various historical, spatial and temporal dimensions, out of our needs, desires and capabilities.
For transgender persons the body is a very critical juncture where a lot of trans politics happens, given the fact that a lot of our identities in terms of gender do not match how we see our bodies.
There are not that many good looking guys in Bangalore, dude. In Bombay, there are so many failed actors. You’re like, good looking, insecure AND delusional? I can keep you.
They use sports, technology, arts, and media to express themselves and to build the confidence to exercise choice and negotiate decisions about their bodies, health and life.
Society finds a million different ways to tell us that sports are not for women but why? In popular culture, it is mostly men who are shown to be excelling at sports. Athletic women are shown as out-of-place ‘tomboys’ and outcasts.
If the workplace looked anything like our world, it would have 50% men and 50% women, 7% would have a college degree, 55% would have access to the internet, and only 70% would have access to a smartphone.
The linkages between access, health, violence, the law, workplaces, gender and sexuality are really high and that’s why we all today—whether we are working on street accessibility, education, disability and employment—need to bring and build our collective understanding around gender and sexuality, keeping it at the core of our work with people, youth, and women with disabilities.
Disability rights activist and comedian Nidhi Goyal busts myths and stereotypes about disability.
In A Heartbeat features a young man is quite literally torn between his heart and his mind when he develops feelings for one of his male classmates.
Which Came First is a film about identity, desires, queerness–it captures the essence of self-discovery.