Kalakriti Publications
Kalakriti India · Knowledge preserved in print
Kalakriti
Publications
Scholarly catalogues, archival monographs, and histories of art — making knowledge as permanent as the collections that inspired them.
The archive, the exhibition
and the book
“A publication is not a record of what happened. It is a way of ensuring that what happened continues to matter.”
Kalakriti India’s publications are produced at the intersection of archival scholarship, curatorial practice, and the visual arts. Each book grows directly from a Kalakriti exhibition or collection — serving both as a record of a significant cultural moment and as a permanent scholarly resource in its own right.
Published in collaboration with institutions including the National Museum New Delhi, the Ministry of Culture (Government of India), and the Krishnakriti Foundation, these publications bring together historians, curators, and critics to produce works of lasting relevance to scholars, collectors, and the general reader alike.
Kalakriti Archives also welcomes collaborations with scholars, authors, filmmakers, and artists whose projects would benefit from access to the collection. Resources may be shared for non-commercial purposes under appropriate copyright and licensing arrangements.
Comprehensive scholarly records of major Kalakriti exhibitions — with critical essays, full-colour reproductions, and curatorial notes that extend the life of each exhibition far beyond its closing date.
Deep-dive publications drawn from the Kalakriti Archives — bringing rare maps, photographs, and prints into rigorous historical and cultural context for researchers and general readers.
Career-spanning publications on individual artists exhibited at Kalakriti Art Gallery — featuring long-form critical essays, interviews, and comprehensive image documentation of significant bodies of work.
Annual publications produced for the Krishnakriti Festival, documenting each edition’s curatorial theme, participating artists, and programme — creating a cumulative record of two decades of cultural activity in Hyderabad.
The complete
publication record
The catalogue of the 16th Krishnakriti Festival, curated by Abeer Gupta, Director of Krishnakriti Foundation. The festival theme explored the city as archive — examining how visual practices document, transform, and reimagine urban space. The publication documents the exhibitions, film screenings, and seminars of the festival, and provides a curatorial framework for future editions. It is not merely a record of events but a critical argument about the relationship between visual culture, cities, and memory.
Approximately 50 photographs and maps from the Kalakriti Archives appear alongside contemporary images of Hyderabad in this publication that offers a tri-perspective of the city — a recent glorious past, an ever-changing present, and visions of the future. The book accompanied the exhibition curated for the Agora Biennale of Architecture, Urbanism and Design in Bordeaux, France in September 2017. A seamless thread of visual history weaves the narrative from late 19th-century maps and photographs through to the present day, including a ‘before and after’ section where contemporary photographers step into the perspectives of earlier photographers such as Lala Deen Dayal.
A compelling and lucid history of Secunderabad’s growth from a British cantonment to an English town — tracing the founding of a new fort, a high-security prison, an Anglo-Indian township called Little England, and the city’s eventual evolution into what it is today. While Hyderabad was founded on love, the book argues that Secunderabad was an offspring of coercive diplomacy. Lavishly illustrated with vintage photographs from the Kalakriti Archives, it is an essential resource for anyone interested in the history of the Deccan and the twin cities.
A career-spanning publication on Hyderabad-based artist Surya Prakash, whose practice spans nearly six decades. The book accompanied the Surya Prakash Retrospective held at Kalakriti Art Gallery between July 28 and August 27, 2017. A long-form critical essay accompanies pictures of Surya’s work across all periods — tracing his surreal, impressionist, yet always resolute vision across several layers of spectacular pigment and imagination, and examining his contribution to the unfolding of certain tendencies in Indian art across the decades.
Written by Vivek Nanda and Alexander Johnson — two of India’s foremost historians and curators of cartographic heritage — this landmark publication traces India’s cartographic traditions from medieval cosmological manuscripts and pre-survey painted maps through to the modern scientific cartography of the colonial era. Lavishly illustrated with high-quality reproductions, each map is separately analysed with its social, cultural, and political context. With the exception of two maps from the National Museum, all maps in the book are from the Prshant Lahoti Personal Collection at the Kalakriti Archives. Published in collaboration with the Ministry of Culture, Government of India — this is the definitive scholarly resource on Indian cartographic heritage.
A comprehensive record of the landmark retrospective of Jogen Chowdhury held at Kalakriti Art Gallery, Hyderabad, between February 16 and March 20, 2016. The publication traces the artist’s journey from his early work in Calcutta in the 1950s through to his fully-formed oeuvre, exploring the unity of intention that runs across all periods of his practice. Features a reprint of K.G. Subramanyan’s celebrated essay on the artist, additional critical essays, an interview, and Jogen’s own words — preserving the intellectual energy of the exhibition in a volume of permanent scholarly value.
The archive is open
to scholarship
Kalakriti Archives and Kalakriti Art Gallery actively seek collaborations with scholars, authors, filmmakers, curators, and artists whose projects would benefit from access to the collection or curatorial partnership. Archival resources are available for use in non-commercial cultural and scholarly contexts under appropriate copyright and licensing arrangements.
Scholars and authors working on books, catalogues, or academic publications may apply for access to maps, photographs, and prints from the Kalakriti Archives for reproduction and research.
Kalakriti India has co-published with the National Museum, the Ministry of Culture, and the Krishnakriti Foundation. Institutional partners with shared scholarly or cultural missions are warmly invited to discuss collaboration.
Kalakriti Archives is interested in supporting films, artworks, and creative projects that draw on the collection — whether as research material, visual source, or active co-production.
“A publication is how an exhibition continues to speak after the walls have been cleared and the lights turned off.”
— Kalakriti India
Research, collaboration
& acquisition
For research access, publication enquiries, archival licensing, or to discuss a collaborative publishing project, please write to the Kalakriti Archives team. For gallery publications and artist monographs, contact Kalakriti Art Gallery directly.
Road No. 4, Banjara Hills
Hyderabad — 500 034, Telangana
