Google HQ Art Installation

Indian Fables at Google HQ

20 of my original pieces from my Indian Fables series were purchased and just installed at the new Google Campus in Mountain View. It feels like such a huge milestone.

What’s really special is where this work began. This body of work began after a trip to Rajasthan—each piece rooted in photographs I took during my travels, then translated into hand-painted compositions and screen prints. The palette draws from the identity of each city—Udaipur’s white, Jaisalmer’s gold—but the intention was never to be literal.

These works are about feeling.
Memory. Movement. Atmosphere.
An interpretation of place that stays with you, long after you leave.

I’ve led over 30 workshops with Google teams, both virtually and in person.
Seeing both my artwork and my creative experiences exist within the same environment feels deeply meaningful.

It's also meaningful where this work now lives. I’ve always loved seeing art exist outside of traditional gallery walls—out in the world, where people can encounter it in their everyday lives. These pieces are installed in a dining hall on Google’s campus, becoming part of a shared, lived space.

It was a curator who brought them together in this way for this space. I love their fresh perspective and it really reflects the collaborative approach I believe in for art and design.

Art isn’t meant to stay on white walls. It’s meant to live, to be experienced, and to connect people.

Indian Fables is a cross-continental body of work that brings together culture, abstraction, and storytelling.

What began in India, evolved in Hawthorne, and found its pause in Napa has now been installed in Mountain View—through the support of a powerful creative network including a fellow artist, an interior design partner, and a visionary curator.

This installation reflects the belief that art belongs in everyday spaces—sparking connection, curiosity, and a sense of place.