An abstract painting with bold red, yellow, and orange blocks and brushstrokes.

Jaisalmer Royal Wedding

Medium: Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 5ft x 5ft
Creation Date: 2022
Collection: Geometric Splendor

Jaisalmer Royal Wedding (2022) is an homage to grandeur — not in scale, but in feeling. Part of the Geometric Splendor Collection, this 60 x 60 inch acrylic painting draws on the ornate traditions, layered colors, and ceremonial elegance of Indian royal weddings, particularly those of Rajasthan’s golden city: Jaisalmer.

The canvas shimmers with jewel tones — deep saffron, maroon, emerald green, and hints of gold — arranged in a pattern-like abstraction that evokes fabric, ritual, and architecture. Geometry guides the composition, but the forms are softened by emotion. It’s not about precision; it’s about memory filtered through reverence.

This work was inspired by recollections of Indian weddings from my childhood — the noise, the dust, the spectacle, the sudden hush when the bride enters. The painting captures not a moment, but a feeling: opulent, sacred, fleeting.

Jaisalmer Royal Wedding shares affinity with the maximalist intricacy of Beatriz Milhazes, whose layered, ornamental abstractions echo cultural hybridity and celebration. Like Milhazes, I believe pattern can hold power — and abstraction can evoke history.

The title anchors the painting in a place and a mythos. Jaisalmer, with its golden sandstone and luminous evenings, becomes a symbol of timeless celebration. But this is not nostalgia. This is translation — ceremony into color, memory into shape.

As part of the Geometric Splendor Collection, this painting expands the idea of structure into celebration. It is both sacred and sensual — a visual offering wrapped in geometry.