Home |Hyderabad |Gallery G Brings On The Go To Hyderabad At Taj Krishna From July 11 To 13
Gallery G Brings ‘On the Go’ to Hyderabad at Taj Krishna from July 11 to 13
Gallery G’s travelling art show On the Go arrives in Hyderabad from July 11–13 at Taj Krishna. The exhibition features India’s modern masters, regional artists, and traditional works, celebrating diversity in Indian art through paintings, sculptures, and heritage pieces
Gallery G Brings ‘On the Go’ to Hyderabad with the Travelling Showcase of India’s Masters & Modernists scheduled at Taj Krishna, Hyderabad, from July 11 to 13.
Hyderabad: Gallery G Brings ‘On the Go’ to Hyderabad with the Travelling Showcase of India’s Masters & Modernists scheduled at Taj Krishna, Hyderabad, from July 11 to 13.
Following a debut at the Raja Varma Hall, Taj Malabar Resort & Spa in Kochi in May, the exhibition now journeys to the city with the Hyderabad edition presenting a mix of voices from across India’s diverse art landscape — from progressive modernists to regional stalwarts and contemporary trailblazers.
For over two decades, Gallery G has been a pillar of the Indian art world, celebrated for its museum-quality curation, insightful storytelling, and unwavering commitment to both classical and contemporary Indian art. With On the Go, the gallery brings its vision directly to its patrons — city by city, story by story.
“On the Go is about breaking geographical boundaries – bringing our carefully curated exhibitions to audiences who’ve always been a part of our journey,” says Gitanjali Maini, Founder & Managing Director, Gallery G.
The featured artists include Ganapathy Hegde, Bharati Prajapati, Sangeeta Baid, Jai Khanna, Avinash Veeraraghavan, Leon, Bhiva Punekar, and Rabin Dutta (Bengal), alongside Telangana-based artists such as Srinivasulu, Surya Prakash, and Redappa Naidu.
The showcase also includes works by modern masters like M F Husain, Yusuf Arakkal, V S Gaitonde, and S M Pandit, as well as traditional Tanjore and Mysore paintings like Ram Pattabhisheka and Vishnavite icons and sculptures like the Bhagavati of Kerala, and rare silver-filigree furniture and many more.