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Hyderabad Design Week begins with exhibition on sherwani

Hyderabad : With an exhibition on ethnic wear sherwani to a workshop on kite making and flying and another event called tie and dye, the Hyderabad Design Week (HDW) began here on Wednesday.

The five-day event, organised by the Government of Telangana, in partnership with India Design Forum (IDF), is aimed at demonstrating the power of design to improve lives.

HDW will coincide with the 31st edition of the prestigious World Design Assembly (WDA), scheduled to be held here on October 11-12. This is the first occasion that Hyderabad will be hosting the WDA.

With over 150 international participants, including members of the World Design Organisation (WDO), HDW will showcase Indian design on a global platform.

Awareness raising initiatives, change-making projects, and memorable events are planned during the five-day HDW.

Other programmes held on the first day of HDW included an Art of Weaving and Fibre workshop, Autodesk Design night, Rube Goldenberg machine workshop, design for cultural context, design for impact, public participation in urban design, and U-turn artists workshop.

Pochampally ikat, Virtual Reality of Qutub Shahi Tombs and Virtual Reality 360 degree experience at Rajiv Gandhi International Airport, flock crowdsourced installation at Ikea, WeaveX by Design Aware at Khairatabad and Indira Gandhi statue near Hitex, Kavaad and charpai weaving at Lamakaan, tessellation in weaving at Phoenix Arena and Indian Photography Festival at the State of Art Gallery, Jubliee Hills were the other highlights on the first day.

British Deputy High Commissioner Andrew Fleming inaugurated an exhibition on sherwani organized at the famous Salar Jung Museum in collaboration with the National Institute of Fashion Technology (NIFT), Hyderabad. The exhibition will continue till October 13.

WDA Education Forum, IDF Awards on October 10, HDW Design Conference on October 11-12, and curated design expo at the Hyderabad International Convention Centre (HICC) presenting designs by leading students and design professionals from across the country, as well as citywide tours showcasing the best of the region’s heritage crafts will be some of the highlights of HDW.

The other highlights include a large-scale upcycled plastic installation curated by the nationally acclaimed street art foundation St+art India, which addresses the environmental impact of consumerism; a series of urban interventions demonstrating how vernacular construction methods can be employed to create sustainable architecture, presented by the studio Designware (India); and a Sustainable Fashion Show curated by UNESCO member Bibi Russell (Bangladesh) that will take place at Chowmahalla Palace, and engage leading Indian designers, brands, and sustainability stakeholders, to showcase inspiring narratives on how fashion can be an agent for positive change.

Eminent design industry figures like Marcus Fairs (Dezeen), Tim Kobe (Eight Inc.), Cristiano Ceccato (Zaha Hadid Architects), Jane Withers (Jane Withers Studio), Emma Greer (Carlo Ratti Associati), Pratap Bose (Tata Motors), Ruchika Sachdeva (Bodice), Sandeep Sangaru (Sangaru Design Studio), and Shiva Nallaperumal will attend the Design Conference.

With the theme of “Humanizing Design”, the conference will consider how design innovation can be used to address pressing humanitarian issues such as poverty, pollution, and the rapid depletion of natural resources.

“Contending among other global cities in 2018, Hyderabad won the bid to host the prestigious World Design Assembly. It is even more wonderful that it will be held in tandem with the city’s own design event Hyderabad Design Week,” said Jayesh Ranjan, Principal Secretary, Department of Industry and Commerce, Government of Telangana.

Hyderabad has been praised by the WDO for giving a proposal that presented opportunities to position design as a critical tool for addressing the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals.

“There are many challenges in today’s world such as ecological crises, infrastructure of the future, ethical impact of technology, among others. Humanizing design will play a crucial role in addressing these,” said Praveen Nahar, Director, National Institute of Design (NID), Ahmedabad.

 

 

 

SOURCE : IANS