RUMA CHOUDHURY | Elemental Encounters: Practice as Ecological Archive: SOLO EXHIBITION

8 August - 18 September 2026

In her solo exhibition at Emami Art Elemental Encounters: Practice as Ecological Archive, Ruma Choudhury presents an expanded understanding of paper as a medium of environmental awareness and archive, where time, nature, and material come together. Her artistic practice reimagines paper not simply as a surface for writing or image-making, but as a material that records the forces of nature itself. Throughout history, paper has preserved knowledge, memory, culture, and human experience. In Choudhury’s work, however, paper becomes a living surface where climate, geography, seasons, and natural elements leave their own marks directly onto the material. 

 

The process begins with an intensive engagement with raw fibres, with which she has been experimenting for more than a decade. The fibres are harvested, boiled, washed, soaked, and slowly ground into pulp through a labour-intensive process rooted in care, patience, and close attention to material. Once transformed into sheets, the paper is exposed to sunlight, rain, humidity, dust, and wind. These environmental conditions gradually alter the surface in unpredictable ways. The rain leaves stains and ruptures, wind deposits particles and residue, and sunlight changes the colour, texture, and strength of the material over time. The season of monsoon is particularly significant in her practice. In this part of the subcontinent, monsoon is a season that shapes landscapes, agricultural cycles, memory, labour, and everyday life. Its arrival transforms the atmosphere, saturates the soil, alters textures and surfaces, and leaves behind traces of erosion, growth, decay, and renewal. So, in her practice, monsoon is an active agent.  

 

By employing locally sourced and seasonal plant materials, Choudhury situates her practice within specific ecological and geographical contexts, where each sheet of paper functions simultaneously as sculpture, document, archive, and ecological record. Rather than documenting a single moment like photography, these fibre-based works record the slow passage of time and the lasting impact of seasonal change. Even the tonal and textural qualities of the fibre embody broader environmental histories.